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    1. #1

      [Novel] The Battle of the Labyrinth - Rick Riordan ( full text online)


      The Battle of the Labyrinth is a 2008 fantasy-adventure novel based on Greek mythology, it is the fourth novel in the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series by Rick Riordan. Fictional demigod Percy Jackson, who is fifteen years old by the end of the book (12 years old in the Lighting Thief ,16 in the Last Olympian when he tries to stop Kronos) Luke Castellan and his army from invading Camp Half-Blood through Daedalus's labyrinth by trying to find Daedalus and convince him not to give Luke Ariadne's string, which would help Luke through the Labyrinth. It was released on 6 May 2008 in the US and Canada.It was received positively overall.


    2. #2
      ONE
      I BATTLE THE CHEERLEADING SQUAD


      The last thing I wanted to do on my summer break was blow up another school. But there I was Monday morning, the first week of June, sitting in my mom’s car in front of Goode High School on East 81st.

      Goode was this big brownstone building overlooking the East River. A bunch of BMWs and Lincoln Town Cars were parked out front. Staring up at the fancy stone archway, I wondered how long it would take me to get kicked out of this place.

      “Just relax.” My mom didn’t sound relaxed. “It’s only an orientation tour. And remember, dear, this is Paul’s school. So try not to…you know.”

      “Destroy it?”

      “Yes.”

      Paul Blofis, my mom’s boyfriend, was standing out front, greeting future ninth graders as they came up the steps. With his salt-and-pepper hair, denim clothes, and leather jacket, he reminded me of a TV actor, but he was just an English teacher. He’d managed to convince Goode High School to accept me for ninth grade, despite the fact that I’d gotten kicked out of every school I’d ever attended. I’d tried to warn him it wasn’t a good idea, but he wouldn’t listen.

      I looked at my mom. “You haven’t told him the truth about me, have you?

      She tapped her fingers nervously on the wheel. She was dressed up for a job interview—her best blue dress and high-heeled shoes.

      “I thought we should wait,” she admitted.

      “So we don’t scare him away.”

      “I’m sure orientation will be fine, Percy, It’s only one morning.”

      “Great,” I mumbled. “I can get expelled before I start the school year.”

      “Think positive. Tomorrow you’re off to camp! After orientation, you’ve got your date—”

      “It’s not a date!” I protested. “It’s just Annabeth, Mom. Jeez!”

      “She’s coming all the way from camp to meet you.”

      “Well, yeah.”

      “You’re going to the movies.”

      “Yeah.”

      “Just the two of you.”

      “Mom!”

      She held up her hands in surrender, but I could tell she was trying hard not to smile. “You’d better get inside, dear. I’ll see you tonight.”

      I was about to get out of the car when I looked over the steps of the school. Paul Blofis was greeting a girl with frizzy red hair. She wore a maroon Tshirt and ratty jeans decorated with marker drawings. When she turned, I caught a glimpse of her face, and the hairs on my arms stood straight up.

      “Percy?” my mom asked. “What’s wrong?”

      “N-nothing,” I stammered. “Does the school have a side entrance?”

      “Down the block on the right. Why?”

      “I’ll see you later.”

      My mom started to say something, but I got out of the car and ran, hoping the redheaded girl wouldn’t see me.

      What was she doing here? Not even my luck could be this bad. Yeah, right. I was about to find out my luck could get a lot worse.

      * * *

      Sneaking into orientation didn’t work out too well. Two cheerleaders in purple-and-white uniforms were standing at the side entrance, waiting to ambush freshmen.

      “Hi!” They smiled, which I figured was the first and last time any cheerleaders would be that friendly to me. One was blond with icy blue eyes. The other was African American with dark curly hair like Medusa’s (and believe me, I know what I’m talking about). Both girls had their names stitched in cursive on their uniforms, but with my dyslexia, the words looked like meaningless spaghetti.

      “Welcome to Goode,” the blond girl said. “You are so going to love it.”

      But as she looked me up and down, her expression said something more like, Eww, who is this loser?

      The other girl stepped uncomfortably close to me. I studied the stitching on her uniform and made out Kelli. She smelled like roses and something else I recognized from riding lessons at camp—the scent of freshly washed horses. It was a weird smell for a cheerleader. Maybe she owned a horse or something. Anyway, she stood so close I got the feeling she was going to try to push me down the steps. “What’s your name, fish?”

      “Fish?”

      “Freshman.”

      “Uh, Percy.”

      The girls exchanged looks.

      “Oh, Percy Jackson,” the blond one said. “We’ve been waiting for you.”

      That sent a major Uh-oh chill down my back. They were blocking the entrance, smiling in a not-very-friendly way. My hand crept instinctively toward my pocket, where I kept my lethal ballpoint pen, Riptide. Then another voice came from inside the building. “Percy?” It was Paul Blofis, somewhere down the hallway. I’d never been so glad to hear his voice.

      The cheerleaders backed off. I was so anxious to get past them I accidentally kneed Kelli in the thigh.

      Clang.

      Her leg made a hollow, metallic sound, like I’d just hit a flagpole.

      “Ow,” she muttered. “Watch it, fish.”

      I glanced down, but her leg looked like a regular old leg. I was too freaked out to ask questions. I dashed into the hall, the cheerleaders laughing behind me.

      “There you are!” Paul told me. “Welcome to Goode!”

      “Hey, Paul—uh, Mr. Blofis.” I glanced back, but the weird cheerleaders had disappeared.

      “Percy, you look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

      “Yeah, uh—”

      Paul clapped me on the back. “Listen, I know you’re nervous, but don’t worry. We get a lot of kids here with ADHD and dyslexia. The teachers know how to help.”

      I almost wanted to laugh. If only ADHD and dyslexia were my biggest worries. I mean, I knew Paul was trying to help, but if I told him the truth about me, he’d either think I was crazy or he’d run away screaming. Those cheerleaders, for instance. I had a bad feeling about them…. Then I looked down the hall, and I remembered I had another problem. The redheaded girl I’d seen on the front steps was just coming in the main entrance.

      Don’t notice me, I prayed.

      She noticed me. Her eyes widened.

      “Where’s the orientation?” I asked Paul.

      “The gym. That way. But—”

      “Bye.”

      “Percy?” he called, but I was already running.

      * * *

      I thought I’d lost her.

      A bunch of kids were heading for the gym, and soon I was just one of three hundred fourteen-year-olds all crammed into the bleachers. A marching band played an out-of-tune fight song that sounded like somebody hitting a bag of cats with a metal baseball bat. Older kids, probably student council members, stood up front modeling the Goode school uniform and looking all, Hey, we’re cool. Teachers milled around, smiling and shaking hands with students. The walls of the gym were plastered with big purpleand-white banners that said WELCOME FUTURE FRESHMEN, GOODE IS GOOD, WE’RE ALL FAMILY, and a bunch of other happy slogans that pretty much made me want to throw up.

      None of the other freshmen looked thrilled to be here, either. I mean, coming to orientation in June, when school doesn’t even start until September, is not cool. But at Goode, “We prepare to excel early!” At least that’s what the brochure said.

      The marching band stopped playing. A guy in a pinstripe suit came to the microphone and started talking, but the sound echoed around the gym so I had no idea what he was saying. He might’ve been gargling. Someone grabbed my shoulder,” What are you doing here?”

      It was her: my redheaded nightmare.

      “Rachel Elizabeth Dare,” I said.

      Her jaw dropped like she couldn’t believe I had the nerve to remember her name. “And you’re Percy somebody. I didn’t get your full name last December when you tried to kill me.”

      “Look, I wasn’t—I didn’t—What are you doing here?”

      “Same as you, I guess. Orientation.”

      “You live in New York?”

      “What, you thought I lived at the Hoover Dam?”

      It had never occurred to me. Whenever I thought about her (and I’m not saying I thought about her; she just like crossed my mind from time to time, okay?), I always figured she lived in the Hoover Dam area, since that’s where I’d met her. We’d spent maybe ten minutes together, during which time I’d accidentally swung a sword at her, she’d saved my life, and I’d run away chased by a band of supernatural killing machines. You know, your typical chance meeting.

      Some guy behind us whispered, “Hey, shut up. The cheerleaders are talking!”

      “Hi, guys!” a girl bubbled into the microphone. It was the blonde I’d seen at the entrance. “My name is Tammi, and this is like, Kelli.” Kelli did a cartwheel.

      Next to me, Rachel yelped like someone had stuck her with a pin. A few kids looked over and snickered, but Rachel just stared at the cheerleaders in horror. Tammi didn’t seem to notice the outburst. She started talking about all the great ways we could get involved during our freshman year.

      “Run,” Rachel told me. “Now.”

      “Why?”

      Rachel didn’t explain. She pushed her way to the edge of the bleachers, ignoring the frowning teachers and grumbling kids she was stepping on. I hesitated. Tammi was explaining how we were about to break into small groups and tour the school. Kelli caught my eye and gave me an amused smile, like she was waiting to see what I’d do. It would look bad if I left right now. Paul Blofis was down there with the rest of the teachers. He’d wonder what was wrong.

      Then I thought about Rachel Elizabeth Dare, and the special ability she’d shown last winter at Hoover Dam. She’d been able to see a group of security guards who weren’t guards at all, who weren’t even human. My heart pounding, I got up and followed her out of the gym.

      * * *

      I found Rachel in the band room. She was hiding behind a bass drum in the percussion section.

      “Get over here!” she said. “Keep your head down!”

      I felt pretty silly hiding behind a bunch of bongos, but I crouched down beside her.

      “Did they follow you?” Rachel asked.

      “You mean the cheerleaders?”

      She nodded nervously.

      “I don’t think so,” I said. “What are they? What did you see?”

      Her green eyes were bright with fear. She had a sprinkle of freckles on her face that reminded me of constellations. Her maroon T-shirt read HARVARD ART DEPT. “You…you wouldn’t believe me.”

      “Oh, yeah, I would,” I promised. “I know you can see through the Mist.”

      “The what?”

      “The Mist. It’s…well, it’s like this veil that hides the way things really are. Some mortals are born with the ability to see through it. Like you.”

      She studied me carefully. “You did that at Hoover Dam. You called me a mortal. Like you’re not.”

      I felt like punching a bongo. What was I thinking? I could never explain. I shouldn’t even try.

      “Tell me,” she begged. “You know what it means. All these horrible things I see?”

      “Look, this is going to sound weird. Do you know anything about Greek myths?”

      “Like…the Minotaur and the Hydra?”

      “Yeah, just try not to say those names when I’m around, okay?”

      “And the Furies,” she said, warming up. “And the Sirens, and—”

      “Okay!” I looked around the band hall, sure that Rachel was going to make a bunch of bloodthirsty nasties pop out of the walls; but we were still alone. Down the hallway, I heard a mob of kids coming out of the gymnasium. They were starting the group tours. We didn’t have long to talk.

      “All those monsters,” I said, “all the Greek gods—they’re real.”

      “I knew it!”

      I would’ve been more comfortable if she’d called me a liar, but Rachel looked like I’d just confirmed her worst suspicion.

      “You don’t know how hard it’s been,” she said. “For years I thought I was going crazy. I couldn’t tell anybody. I couldn’t—” Her eyes narrowed.

      “Wait. Who are you? I mean really? ”

      “I’m not a monster.”

      “Well, I know that. I could see if you were. You look like…you. But you’re not human, are you?”

      I swallowed. Even though I’d had three years to get used to who I was, I’d never talked about it with a regular mortal before—I mean, except for my mom, but she already knew. I don’t know why, but I took the plunge.

      “I’m a half-blood,” I said. “I’m half human.”

      “And half what?”

      Just then Tammi and Kelli stepped into the band room. The doors slammed shut behind them.

      “There you are, Percy Jackson,” Tammi said. “It’s time for your orientation.”

      * * *

      “They’re horrible!” Rachel gasped.

      Tammi and Kelli were still wearing their purple-and-white cheerleader costumes, holding pom-poms from the rally.

      “What do they really look like?” I asked, but Rachel seemed too stunned to answer.

      “Oh, forget her.” Tammi gave me a brilliant smile and started walking toward us. Kelli stayed by the doors, blocking our exit.

      They’d trapped us. I knew we’d have to fight our way out, but Tammi’s smile was so dazzling it distracted me. Her blue eyes were beautiful, and the way her hair swept over her shoulders…

      “Percy,” Rachel warned.

      I said something really intelligent like, “Uhhh?”

      Tammi was getting closer. She held out her pom-poms.

      “Percy!” Rachel’s voice seemed to be coming from a long way away.

      “Snap out of it!”

      It took all my willpower, but I got my pen out of my pocket and uncapped it. Riptide grew into a three-foot-long bronze sword, its blade glowing with a faint golden light. Tammi’s smile turned to a sneer.

      “Oh, come on,” she protested. “You don’t need that. How about a kiss instead?”

      She smelled like roses and clean animal fur—a weird but somehow intoxicating smell.

      Rachel pinched my arm, hard. “Percy, she wants to bite you! Look at her!”

      She’s just jealous,” Tammi looked back at Kelli. “May I, mistress?”

      Kelli was still blocking the door, licking her lips hungrily. “Go ahead, Tammi. You’re doing fine.”

      Tammi took another step forward, but I leveled the tip of my sword at her chest. “Get back.”

      She snarled. “Freshmen,” she said with disgust. “This is our school, halfblood. We feed on whom we choose!”

      Then she began to change. The color drained out of her face and arms. Her skin turned as white as chalk, her eyes completely red. Her teeth grew into fangs.

      “A vampire!” I stammered. Then I noticed her legs. Below the cheerleader skirt, her left leg was brown and shaggy with a donkey’s hoof. Her right leg was shaped like a human leg, but it was made of bronze. “Uhh, a vampire with—”

      “Don’t mention the legs!” Tammi snapped. “It’s rude to make fun!”

      She advanced on her weird, mismatched legs. She looked totally bizarre, especially with the pom-poms, but I couldn’t laugh—not facing those red eyes and sharp fangs.

      “A vampire, you say?” Kelli laughed. “That silly legend was based on us, you fool. We are empousai, servants of Hecate.”

      “Mmmm.” Tammi edged closer to me. “Dark magic formed us from animal, bronze, and ghost! We exist to feed on the blood of young men. Now come, give me that kiss!”

      She bared her fangs. I was so paralyzed I couldn’t move, but Rachel threw a snare drum at the empousa’s head.

      The demon hissed and batted the drum away. It went rolling along the aisles between music stands, its springs rattling against the drumhead. Rachel threw a xylophone, but the demon just swatted that away, too.

      “I don’t usually kill girls,” Tammi growled. “But for you, mortal, I’ll make an exception. Your eyesight is a little too good!”

      She lunged at Rachel.

      “No!” I slashed with Riptide. Tammi tried to dodge my blade, but I sliced straight through her cheerleader uniform, and with a horrible wail she exploded into dust all over Rachel.

      Rachel coughed. She looked like she’d just had a sack of flour dumped on her head. “Gross!”

      “Monsters do that,” I said. “Sorry.”

      “You killed my trainee!” Kelli yelled. “You need a lesson in school spirit, half-blood!”

      Then she too began to change. Her wiry hair turned into flickering flames. Her eyes turned red. She grew fangs. She loped toward us, her brass foot and hoof clopping unevenly on the band-room floor.

      “I am senior empousa,” she growled. “No hero has bested me in a thousand years.”

      “Yeah?” I said. “Then you’re overdue!”

      Kelli was a lot faster than Tammi. She dodged my first strike and rolled into the brass section, knocking over a row of trombones with a mighty crash. Rachel scrambled out of the way. I put myself between her and the empousa. Kelli circled us, her eyes going from me to the sword.

      “Such a pretty little blade,” she said. “What a shame it stands between us.”

      Her form shimmered—sometimes a demon, sometimes a pretty cheerleader. I tried to keep my mind focused, but it was really distracting.

      “Poor dear.” Kelli chuckled. “You don’t even know what’s happening, do you? Soon, your pretty little camp in flames, your friends made slaves to the Lord of Time, and there’s nothing you can do to stop it. It would be merciful to end your life now, before you have to see that.”

      From down the hall, I heard voices. A tour group was approaching. A man was saying something about locker combinations.

      The empousa’s eyes lit up. “Excellent! We’re about to have company!”

      She picked up a tuba and threw it at me. Rachel and I ducked. The tuba sailed over our heads and crashed through the window.

      The voices in the hall died down.

      “Percy!” Kelli shouted, pretending to be scared, “why did you throw that?”

      I was too surprised to answer. Kelli picked up a music stand and swiped a row of clarinets and flutes. Chairs and musical instruments crashed to the floor.

      “Stop it!” I said.

      People were tromping down the hall now, coming in our direction.

      “Time to greet our visitors!” Kelli bared her fangs and ran for the doors. I charged after her with Riptide. I had to stop her from hurting the mortals.

      “Percy, don’t!” Rachel shouted. But I hadn’t realized what Kelli was up to until it was too late.

      Kelli flung open the doors. Paul Blofis and a bunch of freshmen stepped back in shock. I raised my sword.

      At the last second, the empousa turned toward me like a cowering victim.

      “Oh no, please!” she cried. I couldn’t stop my blade. It was already in motion.

      Just before the celestial bronze hit her, Kelli exploded into flames like a Molotov cocktail. Waves of fire splashed over everything. I’d never seen a monster do that before, but I didn’t have time to wonder about it. I backed into the band room as the flames engulfed the doorway.

      “Percy?” Paul Blofis looked completely stunned, staring at me from across the fire. “What have you done?”

      Kids screamed and ran down the hall. The fire alarm wailed. Ceiling sprinklers hissed to life.

      In the chaos, Rachel tugged on my sleeve. “You have to get out of here!”

      She was right. The school was in flames and I’d be held responsible. Mortals couldn’t see through the Mist properly. To them it would look like I’d just attacked a helpless cheerleader in front of a group of witnesses. There was no way I could explain it. I turned from Paul and sprinted for the broken band room window.

      * * *

      I burst out of the alley onto East 81st and ran straight into Annabeth.

      “Hey, you’re out early!” she laughed, grabbing my shoulders to keep me from tumbling into the street. “Watch where you’re going, Seaweed Brain.”

      For a split second she was in a good mood and everything was fine. She was wearing jeans and an orange camp T-shirt and her clay bead necklace. Her blond hair was pulled back in a ponytail. Her gray eyes sparkled. She looked like she was ready to catch a movie, have a cool afternoon hanging out together.

      Then Rachel Elizabeth Dare, still covered in monster dust, came charging out of the alley, yelling, “Percy, wait up!”

      Annabeth’s smile melted. She stared at Rachel, then at the school. For the first time, she seemed to notice the black smoke and ringing fire alarms. She frowned at me. “What did you do this time? And who is this?”

      “Oh, Rachel—Annabeth. Annabeth—Rachel. Um, she’s a friend, I guess.”

      I wasn’t sure what else to call Rachel. I mean, I barely knew her, but after being in two life-or-death situations together, I couldn’t just call her nobody.

      “Hi,” Rachel said. Then she turned to me. “You are in so much trouble. And you still owe me an explanation!”

      Police sirens wailed on FDR Drive.

      “Percy,” Annabeth said coldly. “We should go.”

      “I want to know more about half-bloods,” Rachel insisted. “And monsters. And this stuff about the gods.” She grabbed my arm, whipped out a permanent marker, and wrote a phone number on my hand. “You’re going to call me and explain, okay? You owe me that. Now get going.”

      “But—”

      “I’ll make up some story,” Rachel said. “I’ll tell them it wasn’t your fault. Just go!”

      She ran back toward the school, leaving Annabeth and me in the street.

      “Hey!” I jogged after her. “There were these two empousai,” I tried to explain. “They were cheerleaders, see, and they said camp was going to burn, and—”

      “You told a mortal girl about half-bloods?”

      “She can see through the Mist. She saw the monsters before I did.”

      “So you told her the truth?”

      “She recognized me from Hoover Dam, so—”

      “You’ve met her before?”

      “Um, last winter. But seriously, I barely know her.”

      “She’s kind of cute.”

      “I—I never thought about it.”

      Annabeth kept walking toward York Avenue.

      “I’ll deal with the school,” I promised, anxious to change the subject.

      “Honest, it’ll be fine.”

      Annabeth wouldn’t even look at me. “I guess our afternoon is off. We should get you out of here, now that the police will be searching for you.”

      Behind us, smoke billowed up from Goode High School. In the dark column of ashes, I thought I could almost see a face—a she-demon with red eyes, laughing at me.

      Your pretty little camp in flames, Kelli had said. Your friends made slaves to the Lord of Time.

      “You’re right,” I told Annabeth, my heart sinking. “We have to get to Camp Half-Blood. Now.”


    3. #3
      TWO
      THE UNDERWORLD SENDS ME A PRANK CALL


      Nothing caps off the perfect morning like a long taxi ride with an angry girl.

      I tried to talk to Annabeth, but she was acting like I’d just punched her grandmother. All I managed to get out of her was that she’d had a monsterinfested spring in San Francisco; she’d come back to camp twice since Christmas but wouldn’t tell me why (which kind of ticked me off, because she hadn’t even told me she was in New York); and she’d learned nothing about the whereabouts of Nico di Angelo (long story).

      “Any word on Luke?” I asked.

      She shook her head. I knew this was a touchy subject for her. Annabeth had always admired Luke, the former head counselor for Hermes who had betrayed us and joined the evil Titan Lord Kronos. She wouldn’t admit it, but I knew she still liked him. When we’d fought Luke on Mount Tamalpais last winter, he’d somehow survived a fifty-foot fall off a cliff. Now, as far as I knew, he was still sailing around on his demon-infested cruise ship while his chopped-up Lord Kronos re-formed, bit by bit, in a golden sarcophagus, biding his time until he had enough power to challenge the Olympian gods. In demigod-speak, we call this a “problem.”

      “Mount Tam is still overrun with monsters,” Annabeth said. “I didn’t dare go close, but I don’t think Luke is up there. I think I would know if he was.”

      That didn’t make me feel much better. “What about Grover?”

      “He’s at camp,” she said. “We’ll see him today.”

      “Did he have any luck? I mean, with the search for Pan?”

      Annabeth fingered her bead necklace, the way she does when she’s worried.

      “You’ll see,” she said. But she didn’t explain.

      As we headed through Brooklyn, I used Annabeth’s phone to call my mom. Half-bloods try not to use cell phones if we can avoid it, because broadcasting our voices is like sending up a flare to the monsters: Here I am!

      Please eat me now! But I figured this call was important. I left a message on our home voice mail, trying to explain what had happened at Goode. I probably didn’t do a very good job. I told my mom I was fine, she shouldn’t worry, but I was going to stay at camp until things cooled down. I asked her to tell Paul Blofis I was sorry.

      We rode in silence after that. The city melted away until we were off the expressway and rolling through the countryside of northern Long Island, past orchards and wineries and fresh produce stands.

      I stared at the phone number Rachel Elizabeth Dare had scrawled on my hand. I knew it was crazy, but I was tempted to call her. Maybe she could help me understand what the empousa had been talking about—the camp burning, my friends imprisoned. And why had Kelli exploded into flames?

      I knew monsters never truly died. Eventually—maybe weeks, months, or years from now—Kelli would re-form out of the primordial nastiness seething in the Underworld. But still, monsters didn’t usually let themselves get destroyed so easily. If she really was destroyed. The taxi exited on Route 25A. We headed through the woods along the North Shore until a low ridge of hills appeared on our left. Annabeth told the driver to pull over on Farm Road 3.141, at the base of Half-Blood Hill. The driver frowned. “There ain’t nothing here, miss. You sure you want out?”

      “Yes, please,” Annabeth handed him a roll of mortal cash, and the driver decided not to argue.

      Annabeth and I hiked to the crest of the hill. The young guardian dragon was dozing, coiled around the pine tree, but he lifted his coppery head as we approached and let Annabeth scratch under his chin. Steam hissed out his nostrils like from a teakettle, and he went cross-eyed with pleasure.

      “Hey, Peleus,” Annabeth said. “Keeping everything safe?”

      The last time I’d seen the dragon he’d been six feet long. Now he was at least twice that, and as thick around as the tree itself. Above his head, on the lowest branch of the pine tree, the Golden Fleece shimmered, its magic protecting the camp’s borders from invasion. The dragon seemed relaxed, like everything was okay. Below us, Camp Half-Blood looked peaceful—

      green fields, forest, shiny white Greek buildings. The four-story farmhouse we called the Big House sat proudly in the midst of the strawberry fields. To the north, past the beach, the Long Island Sound glittered in the sunlight. Still…something felt wrong. There was tension in the air, as if the hill itself were holding its breath, waiting for something bad to happen. We walked down into the valley and found the summer session in full swing. Most of the campers had arrived last Friday, so I already felt out of it. The satyrs were playing their pipes in the strawberry fields, making the plants grow with woodland magic. Campers were having flying horseback lessons, swooping over the woods on their pegasi. Smoke rose from the forges, and hammers rang as kids made their own weapons for Arts & Crafts. The Athena and Demeter teams were having a chariot race around the track, and over at the canoe lake some kids in a Greek trireme were fighting a large orange sea serpent. A typical day at camp.

      “I need to talk to Clarisse,” Annabeth said.

      I stared at her as if she’d just said I need to eat a large, smelly boot.

      “What for?”

      Clarisse from the Ares cabin was one of my least favorite people. She was a mean, ungrateful bully. Her dad, the war god, wanted to kill me. She tried to beat me to a pulp on a regular basis. Other than that, she was just great.

      “We’ve been working on something,” Annabeth said. “I’ll see you later.”

      “Working on what?”

      Annabeth glanced toward the forest.

      “I’ll tell Chiron you’re here,” she said. “He’ll want to talk to you before the hearing.”

      “What hearing?”

      But she jogged down the path toward the archery field without looking back.

      “Yeah,” I muttered. “Great talking with you, too.”

      * * *

      As I made my way through camp, I said hi to some of my friends. In the Big House’s driveway, Connor and Travis Stoll from the Hermes cabin were hot-wiring the camps SUV. Silena Beauregard, the head counselor for Aphrodite, waved at me from her Pegasus as she flew past. I looked for Grover, but I didn’t see him. Finally I wandered into the sword arena, where I usually go when I’m in a bad mood. Practicing always calms me down. Maybe that’s because swordplay is one thing I can actually understand. I walked into the amphitheater and my heart almost stopped. In the middle of the arena floor, with its back to me, was the biggest hellhound I’d ever seen.

      I mean, I’ve seen some pretty big hellhounds. One the size of a rhino tried to kill me when I was twelve. But this hellhound was bigger than a tank. I had no idea how it had gotten past the camp’s magic boundaries. It looked right at home, lying on its belly, growling contentedly as it chewed the head off a combat dummy. It hadn’t noticed me yet, but if I made a sound, I knew it would sense me. There was no time to go for help. I pulled out Riptide and uncapped it.

      “Yaaaaah!” I charged. I brought down the blade on the monster’s enormous backside when out of nowhere another sword blocked my strike. CLANG!

      The hellhound pricked up its ears. “WOOF!”

      I jumped back and instinctively struck at the swordsman—a gray-haired man in Greek armor. He parried my attack with no problem.

      “Whoa there!” he said. “Truce!”

      “WOOF!” The hellhound’s bark shook the arena.

      “That’s a hellhound!” I shouted.

      “She’s harmless,” the man said. “That’s Mrs. O’Leary.”

      I blinked. “Mrs. O’Leary?”

      At the sound of her name, the hellhound barked again. I realized she wasn’t angry. She was excited. She nudged the soggy, badly chewed target dummy toward the swordsman.

      “Good girl,” the man said. With his free hand he grabbed the armored manikin by the neck and heaved it toward the bleachers. “Get the Greek! Get the Greek!”

      Mrs. O’Leary bounded after her prey and pounced on the dummy, flattening its armor. She began chewing on its helmet.

      The swordsman smiled dryly. He was in his fifties. I guess, with short gray hair and a clipped gray beard. He was in good shape for an older guy. He wore black mountain-climbing pants and a bronze breastplate strapped over an orange camp T-shirt. At the base of his neck was a strange mark, a purplish blotch like a birthmark or a tattoo, but before I could make out what it was, he shifted his armor straps and the mark disappeared under his collar.

      “Mrs. O’Leary is my pet,” he explained. “I couldn’t let you stick a sword in her rump, now, could I? That might have scared her.”

      “Who are you?”

      Promise not to kill me if I put my sword away?”

      “I guess.”

      He sheathed his sword and held out his hand. “Quintus.”

      I shook his hand. It was as rough as a sandpaper.

      “Percy Jackson,” I said. “Sorry about—How did you, um—”

      “Get a hellhound for a pet? Long story, involving many close calls with a death and quite a few giant chew toys. I’m the new sword instructor, by the way. Helping out Chiron while Mr. D is away.”

      “Oh.” I tried not to stare as Mrs. O’Leary ripped off the target dummy’s shield with the arm still attached and shook it like a Frisbee. “Wait, Mr. D is away?”

      “Yes, well…busy times. Even Dionysus must help out. He’s gone to visit some old friends. Make sure they’re on the right side. I probably shouldn’t say more than that.”

      If Dionysus was gone, that was the best news I’d had all day. He was only our camp director because Zeus had sent him here as a punishment for chasing some off-limits wood nymph. He hated the campers and tried to make our lives miserable. With him away, this summer might actually be cool. On the other hand, if Dionysus had gotten off his butt and actually started helping the gods recruit against the Titan threat, things must be looking pretty bad.

      Off to my left, there was a loud BUMP. Six wooden crates the size of picnic tables were stacked nearby, and they were rattling. Mrs. O’Leary cocked her head and bounded toward them.

      “Whoa, girl!” Quintus said. “Those aren’t for you.” He distracted her with the bronze shield Frisbee.

      The crates thumped and shook. There were words printed on the sides, but with my dyslexia they took me a few minutes to decipher:

      TRIPLE G RANCH

      FRAGILE

      THIS END UP

      Along the bottom, in smaller letters: OPEN WITH CARE. TRIPLE G

      RANCH IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PROPERTY DAMAGE,

      MAIMING, OR EXCRUCIATINGLY PAINFUL DEATHS.

      “What’s in the boxes?” I asked.

      “A little surprise,” Quintus said. “Training activity for tomorrow night. You’ll love it.”

      “Uh, okay,” I said, though I wasn’t sure about the “excruciatingly painful death” part.

      Quintus threw the bronze shield, and Mrs. O’Leary lumbered after it.

      “You young ones need more challenges. They didn’t have camps like this when I was a boy.”

      “You—you’re a half-blood?” I didn’t mean to sound surprised, but I’d never seen an old demigod before.

      Quintus chuckled. “Some of us do survive into adulthood, you know. Not all of us are the subject of terrible prophecies.”

      “You know about my prophecy?”

      “I’ve heard a few things.”

      I wanted to ask what few things, but just then Chiron clip-clopped into the arena. “Percy, there you are!”

      He must’ve just come from teaching archery. He had a quiver and bow slung over his #1 CENTAUR T-shirt. He’d trimmed his curly brown hair and beard for the summer, and his lower half, which was a white stallion, was flecked with mud and grass.

      “I see you’ve met our new instructor.” Chiron’s tone was light, but there was an uneasy look in his eyes. “Quintus, do you mind if I borrow Percy?”

      “Not at all, Master Chiron.”

      “No need to call me ‘Master’,” Chiron said, though he sounded sort of pleased. “Come, Percy. We have much to discuss.”

      I took one more glance at Mrs. O’Leary, who was now chewing off the target dummy’s legs.

      “Well, see you,” I told Quintus.

      As we were walking away, I whispered to Chiron, “Quintus seemed kind of—”

      “Mysterious?” Chiron suggested. “Hard to read?”

      “Yeah.”

      Chiron nodded. “A very qualified half-blood. Excellent swordsman, I just wish I understood…”

      Whatever he was going to say, he apparently changed his mind. “First things first, Percy. Annabeth told me you met some empousai.”

      “Yeah.” I told him about the fight at Goode, and how Kelli had exploded into flames.

      “Mm,” Chiron said. “The more powerful ones can do that. She did not die, Percy. She simply escaped. It is not good that the she-demons are stirring.”

      “What were they doing there?” I asked. “Waiting for me?”

      “Possibly,” Chiron frowned. “It is amazing you survived. Their powers of deception…almost any male hero would’ve fallen under their spell and been devoured.”

      “I would’ve been,” I admitted. “Except for Rachel.”

      Chiron nodded. “Ironic to be saved by a mortal, yet we owe her a debt. What the empousa said about an attack on camp—we must speak of this further. But for now, come, we should get to the woods. Grover will want you there.”

      “Where?”

      “At his formal hearing,” Chiron said grimly. “The Council of Cloven Elders is meeting now to decide his fate.”

      * * *

      Chiron said we needed to hurry, so I let him give me a ride on his back. As we galloped past the cabins, I glanced at the dining hall—an open-air Greek pavilion on a hill overlooking the sea. It was the first time I’d seen the place since last summer, and it brought back bad memories. Chiron plunged into the woods. Nymphs peeked out of the trees to watch us pass. Large shapes rustled in the shadows—monsters that were stocked in here as a challenge to the campers.

      I thought I knew the forest pretty well after playing capture the flag here for two summers, but Chiron took me a way I didn’t recognize, through a tunnel of old willow trees, past a little waterfall, and into a glade blanketed with wildflowers.

      A bunch of satyrs were sitting in a circle in the grass. Grover stood in the middle, facing three really old, really fat satyrs who sat on topiary thrones shaped out of rose bushes. I’d never seen the three old satyrs before, but I guessed they must be the Council of Cloven Elders.

      Grover seemed to be telling them a story. He twisted the bottom of his Tshirt, shifting nervously on his goat hooves. He hadn’t changed much since last winter, maybe because satyrs age half as fast as humans. His acne had flared up. His horns had gotten a little bigger so they just stuck out over his curly hair. I realized with a start that I was taller than he was now. Standing off to one side of the circle were Annabeth, another girl I’d never seen before, and Clarisse. Chiron dropped me next to them. Clarisse’s stringy brown hair was tied back with a camouflage bandanna. If possible, she looked even buffer, like she’d been working out. She glared at me and muttered, “Punk,” which must’ve meant she was in a good mood. Usually she says hello by trying to kill me.

      Annabeth had her arm around the other girl, who looked like she’d been crying. She was small—petite, I guess you’d call it—with wispy hair the color of amber and a pretty, elfish face. She wore a green chiton and laced sandals, and she was dabbing her eyes with a handkerchief. “It’s going terribly,” she sniffled.

      “No, no,” Annabeth patted her shoulders. “He’ll be fine, Juniper.”

      Annabeth looked at me and mouthed the words Grover’s girlfriend. At least I thought that’s what she said, but that didn’t make any sense. Grover with a girlfriend? Then I looked at Juniper more closely, and I realized her ears were slightly pointed. Her eyes, instead of being red from crying, were tinged green, the color of chlorophyll. She was a tree nymph—

      a dryad.

      “Master Underwood!” the council member on the right shouted, cutting off whatever Grover was trying to say. “Do you seriously expect us to believe this?”

      “B-but Silenus,” Grover stammered. “It’s the truth!”

      The Council guy, Silenus, turned to his colleagues and muttered something. Chiron cantered up to the front and stood next to them. I remembered he was an honorary member of the council, but I’d never thought about it much. The elders didn’t look very impressive. They reminded me of the goats in a petting zoo—huge bellies, sleepy expressions, and glazed eyes that couldn’t see past the next handful of goat chow. I wasn’t sure why Grover seemed so nervous.

      Silenus tugged his yellow polo shirt over his belly and adjusted himself on his rosebush throne. “Master Underwood, for six months— six months—

      we have been hearing these scandalous claims that you heard the wild god Pan speak.”

      “But I did!”

      “Impudence!” said the elder on the left.

      “Now, Maron,” Chiron said. “Patience.”

      “Patience, indeed!” Maron said. “I’ve had it up to my horns with this nonsense. As if the wild god would speak to…to him.”

      Juniper looked like she wanted to charge the old satyr and beat him up, but Annabeth and Clarisse held her back. “Wrong fight, girlie,” Clarisse muttered. “Wait.”

      I don’t know what surprised me more: Clarisse holding someone back from a fight, or the fact that she and Annabeth, who despised each other, almost seemed like they were working together.

      “For six months,” Silenus continued, “we have indulged you, Master Underwood. We let you travel. We allowed you to keep your searcher’s license. We waited for you to bring proof of your preposterous claim. And what have you found in six months of travel?”

      “I just need more time,” Grover pleaded.

      “Nothing!” the elder in the middle chimed in. “You have found nothing.”

      “But, Leneus—”

      Silenus raised his hand. Chiron leaned in and said something to the satyrs. The satyrs didn’t look happy. They muttered and argued among themselves, but Chiron said something else, and Silenus sighed. He nodded reluctantly.

      “Master Underwood,” Silenus announced, “we will give you one more chance.”

      Grover brightened. “Thank you!”

      “One more week.”

      “What? But sir! That’s impossible!”

      “One more week, Master Underwood. And then, if you cannot prove your claims, it will be time for you to pursue another career. Something to suit your dramatic talents. Puppet theater, perhaps. Or tap dancing.”

      “But sir, I—I can’t lose my searcher’s license. My whole life—”

      “This meeting of the council is adjourned,” Silenus said. “And now let us enjoy our noonday meal!”

      The old satyr clapped his hands, and a bunch of nymphs melted out of the trees with platters of vegetables, fruits, tin cans, and other goat delicacies. The circle of satyrs broke and charged the food. Grover walked dejectedly toward us. His faded blue T-shirt had a picture of a satyr on it. It read GOT HOOVES?

      “Hi, Percy,” he said, so depressed he didn’t even offer to shake my hand.

      “That went well, huh?”

      “Those old goats!” Juniper said. “Oh, Grover, they don’t know how hard you’ve tried!”

      “There is another option,” Clarisse said darkly.

      “No. No.” Juniper shook her head. “Grover, I won’t let you.”

      His face was ashen. “I—I’ll have to think about it. But we don’t even know where to look.”

      “What are you talking about?” I asked.

      In the distance, a conch horn sounded.

      Annabeth pursed her lips. “I’ll fill you in later, Percy. We’d better get back to our cabins. Inspection is starting.”

      * * *

      It didn’t seem fair that I’d have to do cabin inspection when I just got to camp, but that’s the way it worked. Every afternoon, one of the senior counselors came around with a papyrus scroll checklist. Best cabin got first shower hour, which meant hot water guaranteed. Worst cabin got kitchen patrol after dinner.

      The problem for me: I was usually the only one in the Poseidon cabin, and I’m not exactly what you would call neat. The cleaning harpies only came through on the last day of summer, so my cabin was probably just the way I’d left it on winter break: my candy wrappers and chip bags still on my bunk, my armor for capture the flag lying in pieces all around the cabin. I raced toward the commons area, where the twelve cabins—one for each Olympian god—made a U around the central green. The Demeter kids were sweeping out theirs and making fresh flowers grow in their window boxes. Just by snapping their fingers they could make honeysuckle vines bloom over their doorway and daisies cover their roof, which was totally unfair. I don’t think they ever got last place in inspection. The guys in the Hermes cabin were scrambling around in a panic, stashing dirty laundry under their beds and accusing each other of taking stuff. They were slobs, but they still had a head start on me.

      Over at the Aphrodite cabin, Silena Beauregard was just coming out, checking items off the inspection scroll. I cursed under my breath. Silena was nice, but she was an absolute neat freak, the worst inspector. She liked things to be pretty. I didn’t do “pretty.” I could almost feel my arms getting heavy from all the dishes I would have to scrub tonight.

      The Poseidon cabin was at the end of the row of “male god” cabins on the right side of the green. It was made of gray shell-encrusted sea rock, long and low like a bunker, but it had windows that faced the sea and it always had a good breeze blowing through it.

      I dashed inside, wondering if maybe I could do a quick under-the-bed cleaning job like the Hermes guys, and I found my half-brother Tyson sweeping the floor.

      “Percy!” he bellowed. He dropped his broom and ran at me. If you’ve never been charged by an enthusiastic Cyclops wearing a flowered apron and rubber cleaning gloves, I’m telling you, it’ll wake you up quick.

      “Hey, big guy!” I said. “Ow, watch the ribs. The ribs.”

      I managed to survive his bear hug. He put me down, grinning like crazy, his single calf-brown eye full of excitement. His teeth were as yellow and crooked as ever, and his hair was a rat’s nest. He wore ragged XXXL jeans and a tattered flannel shirt under his flowered apron, but he was still a sight for sore eyes. I hadn’t seen him in almost a year, since he’d gone under the sea to work at the Cyclopes’ forges.

      “You are okay?” he asked. “Not eaten by monsters?”

      “Not even a little bit.” I showed him that I still had both arms and both legs, and Tyson clapped happily.

      “Yay!” he said. “Now we can eat peanut butter sandwiches and ride fish ponies! We can fight monsters and see Annabeth and make things go BOOM!”

      I hoped he didn’t mean all at the same time, but I told him absolutely, we’d have a lot of fun this summer. I couldn’t help smiling, he was so enthusiastic about everything.

      “But first,” I said, “we’ve gotta worry about inspection. We should…”

      Then I looked around and realized Tyson had been busy. The floor was swept. The bunk beds were made. The saltwater fountain in the corner had been freshly scrubbed so the coral gleamed. On the windowsills, Tyson had set out water-filled vases with sea anemones and strange glowing plants from the bottom of the ocean, more beautiful than any flower bouquets the Demeter kids could whip up.

      “Tyson, the cabin looks…amazing!”

      He beamed. “See the fish ponies? I put them on the ceiling!”

      A herd of miniature bronze hippocampi hung on wires from the ceiling, so it looked like they were swimming through the air. I couldn’t believe Tyson, with his huge hands, could make things so delicate. Then I looked over at my bunk, and I saw my old shield hanging on the wall.

      “You fixed it!”

      The shield had been badly damaged in a manticore attack last winter. But now it was perfect again—not a scratch. All the bronze pictures of my adventures with Tyson and Annabeth in the Sea of Monsters were polished and gleaming.

      I looked at Tyson. I didn’t know how to thank him.

      Then somebody behind me said, “Oh, my.”

      Silena Beauregard was standing in the doorway with her inspection scroll. She stepped into the cabin, did a quick twirl, then raised her eyebrows at me.

      “Well, I had my doubts. But you clean up nicely, Percy. I’ll remember that.”

      She winked at me and left the room.

      * * *

      Tyson and I spent the afternoon catching up and just hanging out, which was nice after a morning of getting attacked by demon cheerleaders. We went down to the forge and helped Beckendorf from the Hephaestus cabin with his metalworking. Tyson showed us how he’d learned to craft magic weapons. He fashioned a flaming double-bladed war axe so fast even Beckendorf was impressed.

      While he worked, Tyson told us about his year under the sea. His eye lit up when he described the Cyclopes’ forges and the palace of Poseidon, but he also told us how tense things were. The old gods of the sea, who’d ruled during Titan times, were starting to make war on our father. When Tyson had left, battles had been raging all over the Atlantic. Hearing that made me feel anxious, like I should be helping out, but Tyson assured me that Dad wanted us both at camp.

      “Lots of bad people above the sea, too,” Tyson said. “We can make them go boom.”

      After the forges, we spent some time at the canoe lake with Annabeth. She was really glad to see Tyson, but I could tell she was distracted. She kept looking over at the forest, like she was thinking about Grover’s problem with the council. I couldn’t blame her. Grover was nowhere to be seen, and I felt really bad for him. Finding the lost god Pan had been his lifelong goal. His father and his uncle had both disappeared following the same dream. Last winter, Grover had heard a voice in his head: I await you— a voice he was sure belonged to Pan—but apparently his search had led nowhere. If the council took away his searcher’s license now, it would crush him.

      “What’s this ‘other way’?” I asked Annabeth. “The thing Clarisse mentioned?”

      She picked up a stone and skipped it across the lake. “Something Clarisse scouted out. I helped her a little this spring. But it would be dangerous. Especially for Grover.”

      “Goat boy scares me,” Tyson murmured.

      I stared at him. Tyson had faced down fire-breathing bulls and sea monsters and cannibal giants. “Why would you be scared of Grover?”

      “Hooves and horns,” Tyson muttered nervously. “And goat fur makes my nose itchy.”

      And that pretty much ended our Grover conversation.

      * * *

      Before dinner, Tyson and I went down to the sword arena. Quintus was glad to have company. He still wouldn’t tell me what was in the wooden crates, but he did teach me a few sword moves. The guy was good. He fought the way some people play chess—like he was putting all the moves together and you couldn’t see the pattern until he made the last stroke and won with a sword at your throat.

      “Good try,” he told me. “But your guard is too low.”

      He lunged and I blocked.

      “Have you always been a swordsman?” I asked.

      He parried my overhead cut. “I’ve been many things.”

      He jabbed and I sidestepped. His shoulder strap slipped down, and I saw that mark on his neck—the purple blotch. But it wasn’t a random mark. It had a definite shape—a bird with folded wings, like a quail or something.

      “What’s that on your neck?” I asked, which was probably a rude question, but you can blame my ADHD. I tend to just blurt things out. Quintus lost his rhythm. I hit his sword hilt and knocked the blade out of his hand.

      He rubbed his fingers. Then he shifted his armor to hide the mark. It wasn’t a tattoo, I realized. It was an old burn…like he’d been branded.

      “A reminder.” He picked up his sword and forced a smile. “Now, shall we go again?”

      He pressed me hard, not giving me time for any more questions. While he and I fought, Tyson played with Mrs. O’Leary, who he called the “little doggie.” They had a great time wrestling for the bronze shield and playing Get the Greek. By sunset, Quintus hadn’t even broken a sweat, which seemed kind of strange; but Tyson and I were hot and sticky, so we hit the showers and got ready for dinner.

      I was feeling good. It was almost like a normal day at camp. Then dinner came, and all the campers lined up by cabin and marched into the dining pavilion. Most of them ignored the sealed fissure in the marble floor at the entrance—a ten-foot-long jagged scar that hadn’t been there last summer—

      but I was careful to step over it.

      “Big crack,” Tyson said when we were at our table. “Earthquake, maybe?”

      “No,” I said. “Not an earthquake.”

      I wasn’t sure I should tell him. It was a secret only Annabeth and Grover and I knew. But looking in Tyson’s big eye, I knew I couldn’t hide it from him.

      “Nico di Angelo,” I said, lowering my voice. “He’s this half-blood kid we brought to camp last winter. He, uh…he asked me to guard his sister on a quest, and I failed. She died. Now he blames me.”

      Tyson frowned. “So he put a crack in the floor?”

      “These skeletons attacked us,” I said. “Nico told them to go away, and the ground just opened up and swallowed them. Nico…” I looked around to make sure no one was listening. “Nico is a son of Hades.”

      Tyson nodded thoughtfully. “The god of dead people.”

      “Yeah.”

      “So the Nico boy is gone now?”

      “I—I guess. I tried to search for him this spring. So did Annabeth. But we didn’t have any luck. This is secret, Tyson. Okay? If anyone found out he was a son of Hades, he would be in danger. You can’t even tell Chiron.”

      “The bad prophecy,” Tyson said. “Titans might use him if they knew.”

      I stared at him. Sometimes it was easy to forget that as big and childlike as he was, Tyson was pretty smart. He knew that the next child of the Big Three gods—Zeus, Poseidon, or Hades—who turned sixteen was prophesied to either save or destroy Mount Olympus. Most people assumed that meant me, but if I died before I turned sixteen, the prophecy could just as easily apply to Nico.

      “Exactly,” I said. “So—”

      “Mouth sealed,” Tyson promised. “Like the crack in the ground.”

      * * *

      I had trouble falling asleep that night. I lay in bed listening to the waves on the beach, and the owls and monsters in the woods. I was afraid once I drifted off I’d have nightmares.

      See, for half-bloods, dreams are hardly ever just dreams. We get messages. We glimpse things that are happening to our friends or enemies. Sometimes we even glimpse the past or the future. And at camp, my dreams were always more frequent and vivid.

      So I was still awake around midnight, staring at the bunk bed mattress above me, when I realized there was a strange light in the room. The saltwater fountain was glowing.

      I threw off the covers and walked cautiously toward it. Steam rose from the hot salt water. Rainbow colors shimmered through it, though there was no light in the room except for the moon outside. Then a pleasant female voice spoke from the steam: Please deposit one drachma. I looked over at Tyson, but he was still snoring. He sleeps about as heavily as a tranquilized elephant.

      I didn’t know what to think. I’d never gotten a collect Iris-message before. One golden drachma gleamed at the bottom of the fountain. I scooped it up and tossed it through the mist. The coin vanished.

      “O, Iris, Goddess of the rainbow,” I whispered. “Show me…Uh, whatever you need to show me.”

      The mist shimmered. I saw the dark shore of a river. Wisps of fog drifted across black water. The beach was strewn with jagged volcanic rock. A young boy squatted at the riverbank, tending a campfire. The flames burned an unnatural blue color. Then I saw the boy’s face. It was Nico di Angelo. He was throwing pieces of paper into the fire—Mythomagic trading cards, part of the game he’d been obsessed with last winter.

      Nico was only ten, or maybe eleven by now, but he looked older. His hair had grown longer. It was shaggy and almost touched his shoulders. His eyes were dark. His olive skin had turned paler. He wore ripped black jeans and a battered aviator’s jacket that was several sizes too big, unzipped over a black shirt. His face was grimy, his eyes a little wild. He looked like a kid who’d been living on the streets.

      I waited for him to look at me. No doubt he’d get crazy angry, start accusing me of letting his sister die. But he didn’t seem to notice me. I stayed quiet, not daring to move. If he hadn’t sent this Iris-message, who had?

      Nico tossed another trading card into the blue flames. “Useless,” he muttered. “I can’t believe I ever liked this stuff.”

      “A childish game, master,” another voice agreed. It seemed to come from near the fire, but I couldn’t see who was talking.

      Nico stared across the river. On the far shore was black beach shrouded in haze. I recognized it: the Underworld. Nico was camping at the edge of the river Styx.

      “I’ve failed,” he muttered. “There’s no way to get her back.”

      The other voice kept silent.

      Nico turned toward it doubtfully. “Is there? Speak.”

      Something shimmered. I thought it was just firelight. Then I realized it was the form of a man—a wisp of blue smoke, a shadow. If you looked at him head-on, he wasn’t there. But if you looked out of the corner of your eye, you could make out his shape. A ghost.

      “It has never been done,” the ghost said. “But there may be a way.”

      “Tell me,” Nico commanded. His eyes shined with a fierce light.

      “An exchange,” the ghost said. “A soul for a soul.”

      “I’ve offered!”

      “Not yours,” the ghost said. “You cannot offer your father a soul he will eventually collect anyway. Nor will he be anxious for the death of his son. I mean a soul that should have died already. Someone who has cheated death.”

      Nico’s face darkened. “Not that again. You’re talking about murder.”

      “I’m talking about justice,” the ghost said. “Vengeance.”

      “Those are not the same thing.”

      The ghost laughed dryly. “You will learn differently as you get older.”

      Nico stared at the flames. “Why can’t I at least summon her? I want to talk to her. She would…she would help me.”

      “I will help you,” the ghost promised. “Have I not saved you many times?

      Did I not lead you through the maze and teach you to use your powers? Do you want revenge for your sister or not?”

      I didn’t like the ghost’s tone of voice. He reminded me of a kid at my old school, a bully who used to convince other kids to do stupid things like steal lab equipment and vandalize the teachers’ cars. The bully never got in trouble himself, but he got tons of other kids suspended. Nico turned from the fire so the ghost couldn’t see him, but I could. A tear traced its way down his face. “Very well. You have a plan?”

      “Oh, yes,” the ghost said, sounding quite pleased. “We have many dark roads to travel. We must start—”

      The image shimmered. Nico vanished. The woman’s voice from the mist said, Please deposit one drachma for another five minutes. There were no other coins in the fountain. I grabbed for my pockets, but I was wearing pajamas. I lunged for the nightstand to check for spare change, but the Iris-message had already blinked out, and the room went dark again. The connection was broken.

      I stood in the middle of the cabin, listening to the gurgle of the saltwater fountain and the ocean waves outside.

      Nico was alive. He was trying to bring his sister back from the dead. And I had a feeling I knew what soul he wanted to exchange—someone who had cheated death. Vengeance.

      Nico di Angelo would come looking for me.


    4. #4
      THREE
      WE PLAY TAG WITH SCORPIONS



      The next morning there was a lot of excitement at breakfast. Apparently around three in the morning an Aethiopian drakon had been spotted at the borders of camp. I was so exhausted I slept right through the noise. The magical boundaries had kept the monster out, but it prowled the hills, looking for weak spots in our defenses, and it didn’t seem anxious to go away until Lee Fletcher from Apollo’s cabin led a couple of his siblings in pursuit. After a few dozen arrows lodged in the chinks of the drakon’s armor, it got the message and withdrew.

      “It’s still out there,” Lee warned us during announcements. “Twenty arrows in its hide, and we just made it mad. The thing was thirty feet long and bright green. It’s eyes—” he shuddered.

      “You did well, Lee,” Chiron patted him on the shoulder. “Everyone stay alert, but stay calm. This has happened before.”

      “Aye,” Quintus said from the head table. “And it will happen again. More and more frequently.”

      The campers murmured among themselves.

      Everyone knew the rumors: Luke and his army of monsters were planning an invasion of the camp. Most of us expected it to happen this summer, but no one knew how or when. It didn’t help that our attendance was down. We only had about eighty campers. Three years ago, when I’d started, there had been more than a hundred. Some had died. Some had joined Luke. Some had just disappeared.

      “This is a good reason for new war games, “Quintus continued, a glint in his eyes. “We’ll see how you all do with that tonight.”

      “Yes…” Chiron said. “Well, enough announcements. Let us bless this meal and eat.” He raised his goblet. “To the gods.”

      We all raised our glasses and repeated the blessing.

      Tyson and I took our plates to the bronze brazier and scraped a portion of our food into the flames. I hoped the gods liked raisin toast and Froot Loops.

      “Poseidon,” I said. Then I whispered, “Help me with Nico, and Luke, and Grover’s problem…”

      There was so much to worry about I could’ve stood there all morning, but I headed back to the table.

      Once everyone was eating, Chiron and Grover came over to visit. Grover was bleary-eyed. His shirt was inside out. He slid his plate onto the table and slumped next to me.

      Tyson shifted uncomfortably. “I will go…um…polish my fish ponies.”

      He lumbered off, leaving his breakfast half-eaten.

      Chiron tried for a smile. He probably wanted to look reassuring, but in centaur form he towered over me, casting a shadow across the table. “Well, Percy, how did you sleep?”

      “Uh, fine.” I wondered why he asked that. Was it possible he knew something about the weird Iris-message I’d gotten?

      “I brought Grover over,” Chiron said, “because I thought you two might want to, ah, discuss matters. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have some Irismessages to send. I’ll see you later in the day.” He gave Grover a meaningful look, then trotted out of the pavilion.”

      “What’s he talking about?” I asked Grover.

      Grover chewed his eggs. I could tell he was distracted, because he bit the tines of his fork and chewed those down, too. “He wants you to convince me,” he mumbled.

      Somebody else slid next to me on the bench: Annabeth.

      “I’ll tell you what it’s about,” she said. “The Labyrinth.”

      It was hard to concentrate on what she was saying, because everybody in the dining pavilion was stealing glances at us and whispering. And Annabeth was right next to me. I mean right next to me.

      “You’re not supposed to be here,” I said.

      “We need to talk,” she insisted.

      “But the rules…”

      She knew as well as I did that campers weren’t allowed to switch tables. Satyrs were different. They weren’t really demigods. But the half-bloods had to sit with their cabins. I wasn’t even sure what the punishment was for switching tables. I’d never seen it happen. If Mr. D had been here, he probably would’ve strangled Annabeth with magical grapevines or something, but Mr. D wasn’t here. Chiron had already left the pavilion. Quintus looked over and raised an eyebrow, but he didn’t say anything.

      “Look,” Annabeth said, “Grover is in trouble. There’s only one way we can figure to help him. It’s the Labyrinth. That’s what Clarisse and I have been investigating.”

      I shifted my weight, trying to think clearly. “You mean the maze where they kept the Minotaur, back in the old days?”

      “Exactly,” Annabeth said.

      “So…it’s not under the king’s palace in Crete anymore,” I guessed. “The Labyrinth is under some building in America.”

      See? It only took me a few years to figure things out. I knew that important places moved around with Western Civilization, like Mount Olympus being over the Empire State building, and the Underworld entrance being in Los Angeles. I was feeling pretty proud of myself. Annabeth rolled her eyes. “Under a building? Please, Percy. The Labyrinth is huge. It wouldn’t fit under a single city, much less a single building.”

      I thought about my dream of Nico at the River Styx. “So…is the Labyrinth part of the Underworld?”

      “No.” Annabeth frowned. “Well, there may be passages from the Labyrinth down into the Underworld. I’m not sure. But the Underworld is way, way down. The Labyrinth is right under the surface of the mortal world, kind of like a second skin. It’s been growing for thousands of years, lacing its way under Western cities, connecting everything together underground. You can get anywhere through the Labyrinth.”

      “If you don’t get lost,” Grover muttered. “And die a horrible death.”

      “Grover, there has to be a way,” Annabeth said. I got the feeling they’d had this conversation before. “Clarisse lived.”

      “Barely!” Grover said. “And the other guy—”

      “He was driven insane. He didn’t die.”

      “Oh, joy.” Grover’s lower lip quivered. “That makes me feel much better.”

      “Whoa,” I said. “Back up. What’s this about Clarisse and a crazy guy?”

      Annabeth glanced over toward the Ares table. Clarisse was watching us like she knew what we were talking about, but then she fixed her eyes on her breakfast plate.

      “Last year,” Annabeth said, lowering her voice, “Clarisse went on a mission for Chiron.”

      “I remember,” I said. “It was secret.”

      Annabeth nodded. Despite how serious she was acting, I was happy she wasn’t mad at me anymore. And I kind of liked the fact that she’d broken the rules to come sit next to me.

      “It was secret,” Annabeth agreed, “because she found Chris Rodriguez.”

      “The guy from the Hermes cabin?” I remembered him from two years ago. We’d eavesdropped on Chris Rodriguez aboard Luke’s ship, the Princess Andromeda. Chris was one of the half-bloods who’d abandoned camp and joined the Titan Army.

      “Yeah,” Annabeth said. “Last summer he just appeared in Phoenix, Arizona, near Clarisse’s mom’s house.”

      “What do you mean he just appeared?”

      “He was wandering around the desert, in a hundred and twenty degrees, in full Greek armor, babbling about string.”

      “String,” I said.

      “He’d been driven completely insane. Clarisse brought him back to her mom’s house so the mortals wouldn’t institutionalize him. She tried to nurse him back to health. Chiron came out and interviewed him, but it wasn’t much good. The only thing they got out of him: Luke’s men have been exploring the Labyrinth.”

      I shivered, though I wasn’t exactly sure why. Poor Chris…he hadn’t been a bad guy. What could’ve driven him mad? I looked at Grover, who was chewing up the rest of his fork.

      “Okay,” I asked. “Why were they exploring the Labyrinth?”

      “We weren’t sure,” Annabeth said. “That’s why Clarisse went on a scouting expedition. Chiron kept things hushed up because he didn’t want anyone panicking. He got me involved because…well, the Labyrinth has always been one of my favorite subjects. The architecture involved—” Her expression turned a little dreamy. “The builder, Daedalus, was a genius. But the point is, the Labyrinth has entrances everywhere. If Luke could figure out how to navigate it, he could move his army around with incredible speed.”

      “Except it’s a maze, right?”

      “Full of horrible traps,” Grover agreed. “Dead ends. Illusions. Psychotic goat-killing monsters.”

      “But not if you had Ariadne’s string,” Annabeth said. “In the old days, Ariadne’s string guided Theseus out of the maze. It was a navigation instrument of some kind, invented by Daedalus. And Chris Rodriguez was mumbling about string.”

      “So Luke is trying to find Ariadne’s string,” I said. “Why? What’s he planning?”

      Annabeth shook her head. “I don’t know. I thought maybe he wanted to invade camp through the maze, but that doesn’t make any sense. The closest entrances Clarisse found were in Manhattan, which wouldn’t help Luke get past our borders. Clarisse explored a little way into the tunnels, but…it was very dangerous. She had some close calls. I researched everything I could find about Daedalus. I’m afraid it didn’t help much. I don’t understand exactly what Luke’s planning, but I do know this: the Labyrinth might be the key to Grover’s problem.”

      I blinked. “You think Pan is underground?”

      “It would explain why he’s been impossible to find.”

      Grover shuddered. “Satyrs hate going underground. No searcher would ever try going in that place. No flowers. No sunshine. No coffee shops!”

      “But,” Annabeth said, “the Labyrinth can lead you almost anywhere. It reads your thoughts. It was designed to fool you, trick you and kill you; but if you can make the Labyrinth work for you—”

      “It could lead you to the wild god,” I said.

      “I can’t do it.” Grover hugged his stomach. “Just thinking about it makes me want to throw up my silverware.”

      “Grover, it may be your last chance,” Annabeth said. “The council is serious. One week or you learn to tap dance!”

      Over at the head table, Quintus cleared his throat. I got the feeling he didn’t want to make a scene, but Annabeth was really pushing it, sitting at my table so long.

      “We’ll talk later,” Annabeth squeezed my arm a little too hard. “Convince him, will you?”

      She returned to the Athena table, ignoring all the people who were staring at her.

      Grover buried his head in his hands. “I can’t do it, Percy. My searcher’s license. Pan. I’m going to lose it all. I’ll have to start a puppet theater.”

      “Don’t say that! We’ll figure something out.”

      He looked at me teary-eyed. “Percy, you’re my best friend. You’ve seen me underground. In that Cyclops’s cave. Do you really think I could…”

      His voice faltered. I remembered the Sea of Monsters, when he’d been stuck in a Cyclops’s cave. He’d never liked underground places to begin with, but now Grover really hated them. Cyclopes gave him the creeps, too. Even Tyson…Grover tried to hide it, but Grover and I could sort of read each other’s emotions because of this empathy link between us. I knew how he felt. Grover was terrified of the big guy.

      “I have to leave,” Grover said miserably. “Juniper’s waiting for me. It’s a good thing she finds cowards attractive.”

      After he was gone, I looked over at Quintus. He nodded gravely, like we were sharing some dark secret. Then he went back to cutting his sausage with a dagger.

      * * *

      In the afternoon, I went down to the Pegasus stables to visit my friend Blackjack.

      Yo, boss! He capered around in his stall, his black wings buffeting the air. Ya bring me some sugar cubes?

      “You know those aren’t good for you, Blackjack.”

      Yeah, so you brought me some, huh?

      I smiled and fed him a handful. Blackjack and I went back a long way. I sort of helped rescue him from Luke’s demon cruise ship a few years ago, and ever since, he insisted on repaying me with favors.

      So we got any quests coming up? Blackjack asked. I’m ready to fly, boss!

      I patted his nose. “Not sure, man. Everybody keeps talking about underground mazes.”

      Blackjack whinnied nervously. Nuh-uh. Not for this horse! You aint gonna be crazy enough to go in no maze, boss. Are ya? You’ll end up in the glue factory!

      “You may be right, Blackjack. We’ll see.”

      Blackjack crunched down his sugar cubes. He shook his mane like he was having a sugar seizure. Whoa! Good stuff! Well, boss, you come to your senses and want to fly somewhere, just give a whistle. Ole Blackjack and his buddies, we’ll stampede anybody for ya!

      I told him I’d keep it in mind. Then a group of younger campers came into the stables to start their riding lessons, and I decided it was time to leave. I had a bad feeling I wasn’t going to see Blackjack for a long time.

      * * *

      That night after dinner, Quintus had us suit up in combat armor like we were getting ready for capture the flag, but the mood among the campers was a lot more serious. Sometime during the day the crates in the arena had disappeared, and I had a feeling whatever was in them had been emptied into the woods.

      “Right,” Quintus said, standing on the head dining table. “Gather ’round.”

      He was dressed in black leather and bronze. In the torchlight, his gray hair made him look like a ghost. Mrs. O’Leary bounded happily around him, foraging for dinner scraps.

      “You will be in teams of two,” Quintus announced. When everybody started talking and trying to grab their friends, he yelled: “Which have already been chosen!”

      “AWWWWW!” everybody complained.

      “Your goal is simple: collect the gold laurels without dying. The wreath is wrapped in a silk package, tied to the back of one of the monsters. There are six monsters. Each has a silk package. Only one holds the laurels. You must find the wreath before the other teams. And, of course…you will have to slay the monster to get it, and stay alive.”

      The crowd started murmuring excitedly. The task sounded pretty straightforward. Hey, we’d all slain monsters before. That’s what we trained for.

      “I will now announce your partners,” Quintus said. “There will be no trading. No switching. No complaining.”

      “Aroooof!” Mrs. O’Leary buried her face in a plate of pizza. Quintus produced a big scroll and started reading off names. Beckendorf would be with Silena Beauregard, which Beckendorf looked pretty happy about. The Stoll brothers, Travis and Connor, would be together. No surprise. They did everything together. Clarisse was with Lee Fletcher from the Apollo cabin—melee and ranged combat combined, they would be a tough combo to beat. Quintus kept rattling off the names until he said, “Percy Jackson with Annabeth Chase.”

      “Nice.” I grinned at Annabeth.

      “Your armor is crooked” was her only comment, and she redid my straps for me.

      “Grover Underwood,” Quintus said, “with Tyson.”

      Grover just about jumped out of his goat fur. “What? B-but—”

      “No, no,” Tyson whimpered. “Must be a mistake. Goat boy—”

      “No complaining!” Quintus ordered. “Get with your partner. You have two minutes to prepare!”

      Tyson and Grover both looked at me pleadingly. I tried to give them an encouraging nod, and gestured that they should move together. Tyson sneezed. Grover started chewing nervously on his wooden club.

      “They’ll be fine,” Annabeth said. “Come on. Let’s worry about how we’re going to stay alive.”

      * * *

      It was still light when we got into the woods, but the shadows from the trees made it feel like midnight. It was cold, too, even in summer. Annabeth and I found tracks almost immediately—scuttling marks made by something with a lot of legs. We began to follow the trail.

      We jumped a creek and heard some twigs snapping nearby. We crouched behind a boulder, but it was only the Stoll brothers tripping through the woods and cursing. Their dad was the god of thieves, but they were about as stealthy as buffaloes.

      Once the Stolls had passed, we forged deeper into the west woods where the monsters were wilder. We were standing on a ledge overlooking a marshy pond when Annabeth tensed. “This is where we stopped looking.”

      It took me a second to realize what she meant. Last winter, when we’d given up hope of finding him, Grover, Annabeth, and I had stood on this rock, and I’d convinced them not to tell Chiron the truth: that Nico was a son of Hades. At the time it seemed the right thing to do. I wanted to protect his identity. I wanted to be the one to find him and make things right for what had happened to his sister. Now, six months later, I hadn’t even come close to finding him. It left a bitter taste in my mouth.

      “I saw him last night,” I said.

      Annabeth knit her eyebrows. “What do you mean?”

      I told her about the Iris-message. When I was done, she stared into the shadows of the woods. “He’s summoning the dead? That’s not good.”

      “The ghost was giving him bad advice,” I said. “Telling him to take revenge.”

      “Yeah…spirits are never good advisers they’ve got their own agendas. Old grudges. And they resent the living.”

      “He’s going to come after me,” I said. “The spirit mentioned a maze.”

      She nodded. “That settles it. We have to figure out the Labyrinth.”

      “Maybe,” I said uncomfortably. “But who sent the Iris-message? If Nico didn’t know I was there—”

      A branch snapped in the woods. Dry leaves rustled. Something large was moving in the trees, just beyond the ridge.

      “That’s not the Stoll brothers,” Annabeth whispered.

      Together we drew our swords.

      * * *

      We got to Zeus’s Fist, a huge pile of boulders in the middle of the west woods. It was a natural landmark where campers often rendezvoused on hunting expeditions, but now there was nobody around.

      “Over there,” Annabeth whispered.

      “No, wait,” I said. “Behind us.”

      It was weird. Scuttling noises seemed to be coming from several different directions. We were circling the boulders, our swords drawn, when someone right behind us said, “Hi.”

      We whirled around, and the tree nymph Juniper yelped.

      “Put those down!” she protested. “Dryads don’t like sharp blades, okay?”

      “Juniper,” Annabeth exhaled. “What are you doing here?”

      “I live here.”

      I lowered my sword. “In the boulders?”

      She pointed toward the edge of the clearing. “In the juniper. Duh.”

      It made sense, and I felt kind of stupid. I’d been hanging around dryads for years, but I never really talked to them much. I knew they couldn’t go very far away from their tree, which was the source of life. But I didn’t know much else.

      “Are you guys busy?” Juniper asked.

      “Well,” I said, “we’re in the middle of this game against a bunch of monsters and we’re trying not to die.”

      “We’re not busy,” Annabeth said. “What’s wrong, Juniper?”

      Junper sniffled. She wiped her silky sleeve under her eyes. “It’s Grover. He seems so distraught. All year he’s been out looking for Pan. And every time he comes back, its worse. I thought maybe, at first, he was seeing another tree.”

      “No,” Annabeth said as Juniper started crying. “I’m sure that’s not it.”

      “He had a crush on a blueberry bush once,” Juniper said miserably.

      “Juniper,” Annabeth said, “Grover would never even look at another tree. He’s just stressed out about his searcher’s license.”

      “He can’t go underground!” she protested. “You can’t let him.”

      Annabeth looked uncomfortable. “It might be the only way to help him; if we just knew where to start.”

      “Ah.” Juniper wiped a green tear off her cheek. “About that…”

      Another rustle in the woods, and Juniper yelled, “Hide!”

      Before I could ask why, she went poof into green mist. Annabeth and I turned. Coming out of the woods was a glistening amber insect, ten feet long, with jagged pincers, an armored tail, and a stinger as long as my sword. A scorpion. Tied to its back was a red silk package.

      “One of us gets behind it,” Annabeth said, as the thing clattered toward us.

      “Cuts off its tail while the other distracts it in front.”

      “I’ll take point,” I said. “You’ve got the invisibility hat.”

      She nodded. We’d fought together so many times we knew each other’s moves. We could do this, easy. But it all went wrong when the other two scorpions appeared from the woods.

      “Three?” Annabeth said. “That’s not possible! The whole woods, and half the monsters come at us?”

      I swallowed. One, we could take. Two, with a little luck. Three? Doubtful. The scorpions scurried toward us, whipping their barbed tails like they’d come here just to kill us. Annabeth and I put our backs against the nearest boulder.

      “Climb?” I said.

      “No time,” she said.

      She was right. The scorpions were already surrounding us. They were so close I could see their hideous mouths foaming, anticipating an ice juicy meal of demigods.

      “Look out!” Annabeth parried away a stinger with the flat of her blade. I stabbed with Riptide, but the scorpion backed out of range. We clambered sideways along the boulders, but the scorpions followed us. I slashed at another one, but going on the offensive was too dangerous. If I went for the body, the tail stabbed downward. If I went for the tail, the thing’s pincers came from either side and tried to grab me. All we could do was defend, and we wouldn’t be able to keep that up for very long.

      I took another step sideways, and suddenly there was nothing behind me. It was a crack between two of the largest boulders, something I’d passed by a million times, but…

      “In here,” I said.

      Annabeth sliced at a scorpion then looked at me like I was crazy. “In there? It’s too narrow.”

      “I’ll cover you. Go!”

      She ducked behind me and started squeezing between the two boulders. Then she yelped and grabbed my armor straps, and suddenly I was tumbling into a pit that hadn’t been there a moment before. I could see the scorpions above us, the purple evening sky and the trees, and then the hole shut like the lens of a camera, and we were in complete darkness.

      Our breathing echoed against stone. It was wet and cold. I was sitting on a bumpy floor that seemed to be made of bricks.

      I lifted Riptide. The faint glow of the blade was just enough to illuminate Annabeth’s frightened face and the mossy stone walls on either side of us.

      “Wh-where are we?” Annabeth said.

      “Safe from the scorpions, anyway,” I tried to sound calm, but I was freaking out. The crack between the boulders couldn’t have led into a cave. I would’ve known if there was a cave here; I was sure of it. It was like the ground had opened up and swallowed us. All I could think of was the fissure in the dining room pavilion, where those skeletons had been consumed last summer. I wondered if the same thing had happened to us.

      I lifted my sword again for light.

      “It’s a long room,” I muttered.

      Annabeth gripped my arm. “It’s not a room. It’s a corridor.”

      She was right the darkness felt…emptier in front of us. There was a warm breeze, like in subway tunnels, only it felt older, more dangerous somehow. I started forward, but Annabeth stopped me. “Don’t take another step,”

      she warned. “We need to find the exit.”

      She sounded really scared now.

      “It’s okay,” I promised. “It’s right—”

      I looked up and realized I couldn’t see where we’d fallen in. The ceiling was solid stone. The corridor seemed to stretch endlessly in both directions. Annabeth’s hand slipped into mine. Under different circumstances I would’ve been embarrassed, but here in the dark I was glad to know where she was. It was about the only thing I was sure of.

      “Two steps back,” she advised.

      We stepped backward together like we were in a minefield.

      “Okay,” she said. “Help me examine the walls.”

      “What for?”

      “The mark of Daedalus,” she said, as if that was supposed to make sense.

      “Uh, okay. What kind of—”

      “Got it!” she said with relief. She set her hand on the wall and pressed against a tiny fissure, which began to glow blue. A Greek symbol appeared:

      ∆, the Ancient Greek Delta.

      The roof slid open and we saw night sky, stars blazing. It was a lot darker than it should’ve been. Metal ladder rungs appeared in the side of the wall, leading up, and I could hear people yelling our names.

      “Percy! Annabeth!” Tyson’s voice bellowed the loudest, but others were calling out too.

      I looked nervously at Annabeth. Then we began to climb.

      * * *

      We made our way around the rocks and ran into Clarisse and a bunch of other campers carrying torches.

      “Where have you two been?” Clarisse demanded.

      “We’ve been looking forever.”

      “But we were gone only a few minutes,” I said.

      Chiron trotted up, followed by Tyson and Grover.

      “Percy!” Tyson said. “You are okay?”

      “We’re fine,” I said. “We fell in a hole.”

      The others looked at me skeptically, then at Annabeth.

      “Honest!” I said. “There were three scorpions after us, so we ran and hid in the rocks. But we were only gone a minute.”

      “You’ve been missing for almost an hour,” Chiron said. “The game is over.”

      “Yeah,” Grover muttered. “We would’ve won, but a Cyclops sat on me.”

      “Was an accident!” Tyson protested, and then he sneezed.

      Clarisse was wearing the gold laurels, but she didn’t even brag about winning them, which wasn’t like her. “A hole?” she said suspiciously. Annabeth took a deep breath. She looked around at the other campers.

      “Chiron…maybe we should talk about this at the Big House.”

      Clarisse gasped. “You found it, didn’t you?”

      Annabeth bit her lip. “I—Yeah. Yeah, we did.”

      A bunch of campers started asking questions, looking about as confused as I was, but Chiron raised his hand for silence. “Tonight is not the right time, and this is not the right place.” He stared at boulders as if he’d just noticed how dangerous they were. “All of you, back to your cabins. Get some sleep. A game well played, but curfew is past!”

      There was a lot of mumbling and complaints, but the campers drifted off, talking among themselves and giving me suspicious looks.

      “This explains a lot,” Clarisse said. “It explains what Luke is after.”

      “Wait a second,” I said. “What do you mean? What did we find?”

      Annabeth turned toward me, her eyes dark with worry. “An entrance to the Labyrinth. An invasion route straight into the heart of the camp.”

    5. #5
      FOUR
      ANNABETH BREAKS THE RULES



      Chiron had insisted we talk about it in the morning, which was kind of like, Hey, your life’s in mortal danger. Sleep tight! It was hard to fall asleep, but when I finally did, I dreamed of a prison.

      I saw a goy in a Greek tunic and sandals crouching alone in a massive stone room. The ceiling was open to the night sky, but the walls were twenty feet high and polished marble, completely smooth. Scattered around the room were wooden crates. Some were cracked and tipped over, as if they’d been flung in there. Bronze tools spilled out of one—a compass, a saw, and a bunch of other things I didn’t recognize.

      The boy huddled in the corner, shivering from cold, or maybe fear. He was spattered in mud. His legs, arms, and face, were scraped up as if he’d been dragged here along with the boxes.

      Then the double oak doors moaned open. Two guards in bronze armor marched in, holding an old man between them. They flung him to the floor in a battered heap.

      “Father!” The boy ran to him. The man’s robes were in tatters. His hair was streaked with gray, and his beard was long and curly. His nose had been broken. His lips were bloody.

      The boy took the old man’s head in his arms. “What did they do to you?”

      then he yelled at the guards. “I’ll kill you!”

      “There will be no killing today,” a voice said.

      The guards moved aside. Behind them stood a tall man in white robes. He wore a thin circlet of gold on his head. His beard was pointed like a spear blade. His eyes glittered cruelly. “You helped the Athenian kill my Minotaur, Daedalus. You turned my won daughter against me.”

      “You did that yourself, Your Majesty,” the old man croaked. A guard planted a kick in the old man’s ribs. He groaned in agony. The young boy cried, “Stop!”

      “You love your maze so much,” the king said, “I have decided to let you stay here. This will be your workshop. Make me new wonders. Amuse me. Every maze needs a monster. You will be mine!”

      “I don’t fear you,” the old man groaned.

      The king smiled coldly. He locked his eyes on the boy. “But a man cares about his son, eh? Displease me, old man, and the next time my guards inflict a punishment, it will be on him!”

      The king swept out of the room with his guards, and the doors slammed shut, leaving the boy and his father alone in the darkness.

      “What shall we do?” the boy moaned. “Father, they will kill you!”

      The old man swallowed with difficulty. He tried to smile, but it was a gruesome sight with his bloody mouth.

      “Take heart, my son.” He gazed up at the stars. “I—I will find a way.”

      A bar lowered across the doors with a fatal BOOM, and I woke in a cold sweat.

      * * *

      I was still feeling shaky the next morning when Chiron called a war council. We met in the sword arena, which I thought was pretty strange—

      trying to discuss the fate of the camp while Mrs. O’Leary chewed on a lifesize squeaky pink rubber yak. Chiron and Quintus stood at the front by the weapon racks. Clarisse and Annabeth sat next to each other and led the briefing. Tyson and Grover sat as far away from each other as possible. Also present around the table: Juniper the tree nymph, Silena Beauregard, Travis and Connor Stoll, Beckendorf, Lee Fletcher, even Argus, our hundred-eyed security chief. That’s how I knew it was serious. Argus hardly ever shows up unless something really major is going on. The whole time Annabeth spoke, he kept his hundred blue eyes trained on her so hard his whole body turned bloodshot.

      “Luke must have known about the Labyrinth entrance,” Annabeth said.

      “He knew everything about camp.”

      I thought I heard a little pride in her voice, like she still respected the guy, evil as he was.

      Juniper cleared her throat. “That’s what I was trying to tell you last night. The cave entrance has been there a long time. Luke used to use it.”

      Silena Beauregard frowned. “You knew about the Labyrinth entrance, and you didn’t say anything?”

      Juniper’s face turned green. “I didn’t know it was important. Just a cave. I don’t like yucky old caves.”

      “She has good taste,” Grover said.

      “I wouldn’t have paid any attention except…well, it was Luke.” She blushed a little greener.

      Grover huffed. “Forget what I said about good taste.”

      “Interesting,” Quintus polished his sword as he spoke. “And you believe this young man, Luke, would dare use the Labyrinth as an invasion route?”

      “Definitely,” Clarisse said. “If he could get an army of monsters inside Camp Half-Blood, just pop up in the middle of the woods without having to worry about our magical boundaries, we wouldn’t stand a chance. He could wipe us out easy. He must’ve been planning this for months.”

      “He’s been sending scouts into the maze,” Annabeth said. “We know because…because we found one.”

      “Chris Rodriguez,” Chiron said. He gave Quintus a meaningful look.

      “Ah,” Quintus said. “The one in the…Yes, I understand.”

      “The one in the what?” I asked.

      Clarisse glared at me. “The point is, Luke has been looking for a way to navigate the maze. He’s searching for Daedalus’s workshop.”

      I remembered my dream the night before—the bloody old man in tattered robes. “The guy who created the maze.”

      “Yes,” Annabeth said. “The greatest architect, the greatest inventor of all time. If the legends are true, his workshop is in the center of the Labyrinth. He’s the only one who knew how to navigate the maze perfectly. If Luke managed to find the workshop and convince Daedalus to help him, Luke wouldn’t have to fumble around searching for paths, or risk losing his army in the maze’s traps. He could navigate anywhere he wanted—quickly and safely. First to Camp Half-Blood to wipe us out. Then…to Olympus.”

      The arena was silent except for Mrs. O’Leary’s toy yak getting disemboweled: SQUEAK! SQUEAK!

      Finally Beckendorf put his huge hands on the table. “Back up a sec, Annabeth, you said ‘convince Daedalus’? Isn’t Daedalus dead?”

      Quintus grunted. “I would hope so. He lived, what, three thousand years ago? And even if he were alive, don’t the old stories say he fled from the Labyrinth?”

      Chiron clopped restlessly on his hooves. “That’s the problem, my dear Quintus. No one knows. There are rumors…well, there are many disturbing rumors about Daedalus, but one is that he disappeared back into the Labyrinth toward the end of his life. He might still be there.”

      I thought about the old man I’d seen in my dreams. He’d looked so frail, it was hard to believe he’d lasted another week, much less three thousand years.

      “We need to go in,” Annabeth announced. “We have to find the workshop before Luke does. If Daedalus is alive, we convince him to help us, not Luke. If Ariadne’s string still exists, we make sure it never falls into Luke’s hands.”

      “Wait a second,” I said. “If we’re worried about an attack, why not just blow up the entrance? Seal the tunnel?”

      “Great idea!” Grover said. “I’ll get the dynamite!”

      “It’s not so easy, stupid,” Clarisse growled. “We tried that at the entrance we found in Phoenix. It didn’t go well.”

      Annabeth nodded. “The Labyrinth is magical architecture, Percy. It would take huge power to seal even one of its entrances. In Phoenix, Clarisse demolished a whole building with a wrecking ball, and the maze entrance just shifted a few feet. The best we can do is prevent Luke from learning to navigate the Labyrinth.”

      “We could fight,” Lee Fletcher said. “We know where the entrance is now. We can set up a defensive line and wait for them. If an army tries to come through, they’ll find us waiting with our bows.”

      “We will certainly set up defenses,” Chiron agreed. “But I fear Clarisse is right. The magical borders have kept this camp safe for hundreds of years. If Luke manages to get a large army of monsters into the center of camp, bypassing our boundaries…we may not have the strength to defeat them.”

      Nobody looked real happy about that news. Chiron usually tried to be upbeat and optimistic. If he was predicting we couldn’t hold off an attack, that wasn’t good.

      “We have to get to Daedalus’s workshop first,” Annabeth insisted. “Find Ariadne’s string and prevent Luke from using it.”

      “But if nobody can navigate in there,” I said, “what chance do we have?”

      “I’ve been studying architecture for years,” she said. “I know Daedalus’s Labyrinth better than anybody.”

      “From reading about it.”

      “Well, yes.”

      “That’s not enough.”

      “It has to be!”

      “It isn’t!”

      “Are you going to help me or not?”

      I realized everyone was watching Annabeth and me like a tennis match. Mrs. O’Leary’s squeaky yak went EEK! As she ripped off its pink rubber head.

      Chiron cleared his throat. “First things first. We need a quest. Someone must enter the Labyrinth, find the workshop of Daedalus, and prevent Luke from using the maze to invade this camp.”

      “We all know who should lead this,” Clarisse said. “Annabeth.”

      There was a murmur of agreement. I knew Annabeth had been waiting for her own quest since she was a little kid, but she looked uncomfortable.

      “You’ve done as much as I have, Clarisse,” she said. “You should go, too.”

      Clarisse shook her head. “I’m not going back in there.”

      Travis Stoll laughed. “Don’t tell me you’re scared. Clarisse, chicken?”

      Clarisse got to her feet, I thought she was going to pulverize Travis, but she said in a shaky voice: “You don’t understand anything, punk. I’m never going in there again. Never!”

      She stormed out of the arena.

      Travis looked around sheepishly. “I didn’t mean to—”

      Chiron raised his hand. “The poor girl has had a difficult year. Now, do we have agreement that Annabeth should lead the quest?”

      We all nodded except Quintus. He folded his arms and stared at the table, but I wasn’t sure anyone else noticed.

      “Very well,” Chiron turned to Annabeth. “My dear, it’s your time to visit the Oracle. Assuming you return to us in one piece, we shall discuss what to do next.”

      * * *

      Waiting for Annabeth was harder than visiting the Oracle myself. I’d heard it speak prophecies twice before. The first time had been in the dusty attic of the Big House, where the spirit of Delphi slept inside the body of a mummified hippie lady. The second time, the Oracle had come out for a little stroll in the woods. I still had nightmares about that. I’d never felt threatened by the Oracle’s presence, but I’d heard stories: campers who’d gone insane, or who’d seen visions so real they died of fear. I paced the arena, waiting. Mrs. O’Leary ate her lunch, which consisted of a hundred pounds of ground beef and several dog biscuits the size of trashcan lids. I wondered where Quintus got dog biscuits that size. I didn’t figure you could just walk into Pet Zone and put those in your shopping cart. Chiron was deep in conversation with Quintus and Argus. It looked to me like they were disagreeing about something. Quintus kept shaking his head. On the other side of the arena, Tyson and the Stoll brothers were racing miniature bronze chariots that Tyson had made out of armor scraps. I gave up on pacing and left the arena. I stared across the fields at the Big House’s attic window, dark and still. What was taking Annabeth so long? I was pretty sure it hadn’t taken me this long to get my quest.

      “Percy,” a girl whispered.

      Juniper was standing in the bushes. It was weird how she almost turned invisible when she was surrounded by plants.

      She gestured me over urgently. “You need to know: Luke wasn’t the only one I saw around that cave.”

      “What do you mean?”

      She glanced back at the arena. “I was trying to say something, but he was right there.”

      “Who?”

      “The sword master,” she said. “He was poking around the rocks.”

      My stomach clenched. “Quintus? When?”

      “I don’t know: I don’t pay attention to time. Maybe a week ago, when he first showed up.”

      “What was he doing? Did he go in?”

      “I—I’m not sure. He’s creepy, Percy. I didn’t even see him come into the glade. Suddenly he was just there. You have to tell Grover it’s too dangerous—”

      “Juniper?” Grover called from inside the arena. “Where’d you go?”

      Juniper sighed. “I’d better go in. Just remember what I said. Don’t trust that man!”

      She ran into the arena.

      I stared at the Big House, feeling more uneasy than ever. If Quintus was up to something…I needed Annabeth’s advice. She might know what to make of Juniper’s news. But where the heck was she? Whatever was happening with the Oracle, it shouldn’t be taking this long. Finally I couldn’t stand it anymore.

      It was against the rules, but then again, nobody was watching. I ran down the hill and headed across the fields.

      * * *

      The front parlor of the Big House was strangely quiet. I was used to seeing Dionysus by the fireplace, playing cards and eating grapes and griping at satyrs, but Mr. D was still away.

      I walked down the hallway, floorboards creaking under my feat. When I got to the base of the stairs, I hesitated. Four floors above would be a little trapdoor leading to the attic. Annabeth would be up there somewhere. I stood quietly and listened. But what I heard wasn’t what I had expected. Sobbing. And it was coming from below me.

      I crept around the back of the stairs. The basement door was open. I didn’t even know the Big House had a basement. I peered inside and saw two figures in the far corner, sitting amid a bunch of stockpiled cases of ambrosia and strawberry preserves. One was Clarisse. The other was a teenage Hispanic guy in tattered camouflage pants and a dirty black T-shirt. His hair was greasy and matted. He was hugging his shoulders and sobbing. It was Chris Rodriguez, the half-blood who’d gone to work for Luke.

      “It’s okay,” Clarisse was telling him. “Try a little more nectar.”

      “You’re an illusion, Mary!” Chris backed farther into the corner. “G-get away.”

      “My name’s not Mary.” Clarisse’s voice was gentle but really sad. I never knew Clarisse could sound that way. “My name is Clarisse. Remember. Please.”

      “It’s dark!” Chris yelled. “So dark!”

      “Come outside,” Clarisse coaxed. “The sunlight will help you.”

      “A…a thousand skulls. The earth keeps healing him.”

      “Chris,” Clarisse pleaded. It sounded like she was close to tears. “You have to get better. Please. Mr. D will be back soon. He’s an expert in madness. Just hang on.”

      Chris’s eyes were like a cornered rat’s—wild and desperate. “There’s no way out, Mary. No way out.”

      Then he caught a glimpse of me and made a strangled, terrified sound.

      “The son of Poseidon! He’s horrible!”

      I backed away, hoping Clarisse hadn’t seen me. I listened for her to come charging out and yell at me, but instead she just kept talking to Chris in a sad pleading voice, trying to get him to drink the nectar. Maybe she thought it was part of Chris’s hallucination, but… son of Poseidon? Chris had been looking at me, and yet why did I get the feeling he hadn’t been talking about me at all?

      And Clarisse’s tenderness—it had never even occurred to me that she might like someone; but the way she said Chris’s name…She’d known him before he changed sides. She’d known him a lot better than I realized. And now he was shivering in a dark basement, afraid to come out, and mumbling about someone named Mary. No wonder Clarisse didn’t want anything to do with the Labyrinth. What had happened to Chris in there?

      I heard a creak from above—like the attic door opening—and I ran for the front door. I needed to get out of that house.

      * * *

      “My dear,” Chiron said. “You made it.”

      Annabeth looked at me first. I couldn’t tell if she was trying to warn me, or if the look in her eyes was just plain fear. Then she focused on Quintus. “I got the prophecy. I will lead the quest to find Daedalus’s workshop.”

      Nobody cheered. I mean, we all liked Annabeth, and we wanted her to have a quest, but this one seemed insanely dangerous. After what I’d seen of Chris Rodriguez, I didn’t even want to think about Annabeth descending into that weird maze again.

      Chiron scraped a hoof on the dirt floor. “What did the prophecy say exactly, my dear? The wording is important.”

      Annabeth took a deep breath. “I, ah…well, it said, you shall delve in the darkness of the endless maze...”

      We waited.

      “The dead, the traitor, and the lost one raise.”

      Grover perked up. “The lost one! That must mean Pan! That’s great!”

      “With the dead and the traitor,” I added. “Not so great.”

      “And?” Chiron asked. “What is the rest?”

      “You shall rise or fall by the ghost king’s hand,” Annabeth said, “the child of Athena’s final stand.”

      Everyone looked around uncomfortably. Annabeth was a daughter of Athena, and a final stand didn’t sound good.

      “Hey…we shouldn’t jump to conclusions,” Silena said. “Annabeth isn’t the only child of Athena, right?”

      “But who’s this ghost king?” Beckendorf asked.

      No one answered. I thought about the Iris-message I’d seen of Nico summoning spirits. I had a bad feeling the prophecy was connected to that.

      “Are there more lines?” Chiron asked. “The prophecy does not sound complete.”

      Annabeth hesitated. “I don’t remember exactly.”

      Chiron raised an eyebrow. Annabeth was known for her memory. She never forgot something she heard.

      Annabeth shifted on her bench. “Something about… Destroy with a hero’s final breath. ”

      “And?” Chiron asked.

      She stood. “Look, the point is, I have to go in. I’ll find the workshop and stop Luke. And…I need help.” She turned to me. “Will you come?”

      I didn’t even hesitate. “I’m in.”

      She smiled for the first time in days, and that made it all worthwhile.

      “Grover, you too? The wild god is waiting.”

      Grover seemed to forget how much he hated the underground. The line about the “lost one” had completely energized him. “I’ll pack extra recyclables for snacks!”

      “And Tyson,” Annabeth said. “I’ll need you too.”

      “Yay! Blow-things-up time!” Tyson clapped so hard he woke up Mrs. O’Leary, who was dozing in the corner.

      “Wait, Annabeth,” Chiron said. “This goes against the ancient laws. A hero is allowed only two companions.”

      “I need them all,” she insisted. “Chiron, it’s important.”

      I didn’t know why she was so certain, but I was happy she’d included Tyson. I couldn’t imagine leaving him behind. He was huge and strong and great at figuring out mechanical things. Unlike satyrs, Cyclopes had no problem underground.

      “Annabeth.” Chiron flicked his tail nervously. “Consider well. You would be breaking the ancient laws, and there are always consequences. Last winter, five went on a quest to save Artemis. Only three came back. Think on that. Three is a sacred number. There are three fates, three furies, three Olympian sons of Kronos. It is a good strong number that stands against many dangers. Four…this is risky.”

      Annabeth took a deep breath. “I know. But we have to. Please.”

      I could tell Chiron didn’t like it. Quintus was studying us, like he was trying to decide which of us would come back alive.

      Chiron sighed. “Very well. Let us adjourn. The members of the quest must prepare themselves. Tomorrow at dawn, we send you into the Labyrinth.”

      * * *

      Quintus pulled me aside as the council was breaking up.

      “I have a bad feeling about this,” he told me.

      Mrs. O’Leary came over, wagging her tail happily. She dropped her shield at my feet, and I threw it for her. Quintus watched her romp after it. I remembered what Juniper had said about him scouting out the maze. I didn’t’ trust him, but when he looked at me, I saw real concern in his eyes.

      “I don’t like the idea of you going down there,” he said. “Any of you. but if you must, I want you to remember something. The Labyrinth exists to fool you. It will distract you. That’s dangerous for half-bloods. We are easily distracted.”

      “You’ve been in there?”

      “Long ago.” His voice was ragged. “I barely escaped with my life. Most who enter aren’t that lucky.”

      He gripped my shoulder. “Percy, keep your mind on what matters most. If you can do that, you might find the way. And here, I wanted to give you something.”

      He handed me a little silver tube. It was so cold I almost dropped it.

      “A whistle?” I asked.

      “A dog whistle,” Quintus said. “For Mrs. O’Leary.”

      “Um, thanks, but—”

      “How will it work in the maze? I’m not a hundred percent certain it will. But Mrs. O’Leary is a hellhound. She can appear when called, no matter how far away she is. I’d feel better knowing you had this. If you really need help, use it; but be careful, the whistle is made of Stygian ice.”

      “What ice?”

      “From the River Styx. Very hard to craft. Very delicate. It cannot melt, but it will shatter when you blow it, so you can only use it once.”

      I thought about Luke, my old enemy. Right before I’d gone on my first quest, Luke had given me a gift, too—magic shoes that had been designed to drag me to my death. Quintus seemed nice. So concerned. And Mrs. O’Leary liked him, which had to count for something. She dropped the slimy shield at my feet and barked excitedly.

      I felt ashamed that I could even think about mistrusting Quintus. But then again, I’d trusted Luke once.

      “Thanks,” I told Quintus. I slipped the freezing whistle into my pocket, promising myself that I would never use it, and I dashed off to find Annabeth.

      * * *

      As long as I’d been at camp, I’d never been inside the Athena cabin. It was a silvery building, nothing fancy, with plain white curtains and a carved stone owl over the doorway. The owl’s onyx eyes seemed to follow me as I walked closer.

      “Hello?” I called inside.

      Nobody answered. I stepped in and caught my breath. The place was a workshop for brainiac kids. The bunks were all pushed against one wall as if sleeping didn’t matter very much. Most of the room was filled with workbenches and tables and sets of tools and weapons. The back of the room was a huge library crammed with old scrolls and leather-bound books and paperbacks. There was and architect’s drafting table with a bunch of rulers and protractors, and some 3-D models of buildings. Huge old war maps were plastered to the ceiling. Sets of armor hung under the windows, their bronze plates glinting in the sun.

      Annabeth stood in the back of the room, rifling through old scrolls.

      “Knock, knock?” I said.

      She turned with a start. “Oh…hi. Didn’t hear you.”

      “You okay?”

      She frowned at the scroll in her hands. “Just trying to do some research. Daedalus’s Labyrinth is so huge. None of the stories agree about anything. The maps just lead from nowhere to nowhere.”

      I thought about what Quintus had said, how the maze tries to distract you. I wondered if Annabeth knew that already.

      “We’ll figure it out,” I promised.

      Her hair had come loose and was hanging in a tangled blond curtain all around her face. Her gray eyes looked almost black.

      “I’ve wanted to lead a quest since I was seven,” she said.

      “You’re going to do awesome.”

      She looked at me gratefully, but then stared down at all the books and scrolls she’d pulled from the shelves. “I’m worried, Percy. Maybe I shouldn’t have asked you to do this. Or Tyson or Grover.”

      “Hey, we’re your friends. We wouldn’t miss it.”

      “But…” She stopped herself.

      “What is it?” I asked. “The prophecy?”

      “I’m sure it’s fine,” she said in a small voice.

      “What was the last line?”

      Then she did something that really surprised me. She blinked back tears and put out her arms.

      I stepped forward and hugged her. Butterflies started turning my stomach into a mosh pit.

      “Hey, it’s…it’s okay.” I patted her back.

      I was aware of everything in the room. I felt like I could read the tiniest print on any book on the shelves. Annabeth’s hair smelled like lemon soap. She was shivering.

      “Chiron might be right,” she muttered. “I’m breaking the rules. But I don’t know what else to do. I need you three. It just feels right.”

      “Then don’t worry about it,” I managed. “We’ve had plenty of problems before, and we solved them.”

      “This is different. I don’t want anything happening to…any of you.”

      Behind me, somebody cleared his throat.

      It was one of Annabeth’s half-brothers, Malcolm. His face was bright red.

      “Um, sorry,” he said. “Archery practice is starting, Annabeth. Chiron said to come find you.”

      I stepped away from Annabeth. “We were just looking at maps,” I said stupidly.

      Malcolm stared at me. “Okay.”

      “Tell Chiron I’ll be right there,” Annabeth said, and Malcom left in a hurry.

      Annabeth rubbed her eyes. “You go ahead, Percy. I’d better get ready for archery.”

      I nodded, feeling more confused than I ever had in my life. I wanted to run from the cabin…but then again I didn’t.

      “Annabeth?” I said. “About your prophecy. The line about a hero’s last breath—”

      “You’re wondering which hero? I don’t know.”

      “No. Something else. I was thinking the last line usually rhymes with the one before it. Was it something about—did it end in the word death?”

      Annabeth stared down at her scrolls. “You’d better go, Percy. Get ready for the quest. I’ll—I’ll see you in the morning.”

      I left her there, staring at maps that led from nowhere to nowhere; but I couldn’t shake the feeling that one of us wasn’t going to come back from this quest alive.


    6. #6
      FIVE
      NICO BUYS HAPPY MEALS FOR THE DEAD



      At least I got a good night’s sleep before the quest, right?

      Wrong.

      That night in my dreams, I was in the stateroom of the Princess Andromeda. The windows were open on a moonlit sea. Cold wind rustled the velvet drapes.

      Luke knelt on a Persian rug in front of the golden sarcophagus of Kronos. In the moonlight, Luke’s blond hair looked pure white. He wore an ancient Greek chiton and a white himation, a kind of cape that flowed down his shoulders. The white clothes made him look timeless and a little surreal, like one of the minor gods on Mount Olympus. The last time I’d seen him, he’d been broken and unconscious after a nasty fall from Mount Tam. Now he looked perfectly fine. Almost too healthy.

      “Our spies report success, my lord,” he said. “Camp Half-Blood is sending a quest, as you predicted. Our side of the bargain is almost complete.”

      Excellent. The voice of Kronos didn’t so much speak as pierce my mind like a dagger. It was freezing with cruelty. Once we have the means to navigate, I will lead the vanguard through myself.

      Luke closed his eyes as if collecting his thoughts. “My lord, perhaps it is too soon. Perhaps Krios or Hyperion should lead—”

      No. the voice was quiet but absolutely firm. I will lead. One more heart shall join our cause, and that will be sufficient. At last I shall rise fully from Tartarus.

      “But the form, my lord…” Luke’s voice started shaking.

      Show me your sword, Luke Castellan.

      A jolt went through me. I realized I’d never heard Luke’s last name before. It had never even occurred to me.

      Luke drew his sword. Backbiter’s double edge glowed wickedly—half steel, half celestial bronze. I’d almost been killed several times by that sword. It was an evil weapon, able to kill both mortals and monsters. It was the only blade I really feared.

      You pledged yourself to me, Kronos reminded him. You took this sword as proof of your oath.

      “Yes, my lord. It’s just—”

      You wanted power. I gave you that. You are now beyond harm. Soon you will rule the world of gods and mortals. Do you not wish to avenge yourself?

      To see Olympus destroyed?

      A shiver ran through Luke’s body. “Yes.”

      The coffin glowed, golden light filling the room. Then make ready the strike force. As soon as the bargain is done, we shall move forward. First, Camp Half-Blood will be reduced to ashes. Once those bothersome heroes are eliminated, we will march on Olympus.

      There was a knock on the stateroom doors. The light of the coffin faded. Luke rose. He sheathed his sword, adjusted his white clothes, and took a deep breath.

      “Come in.”

      The doors opened. Two dracaenae slithered in—snake women with double serpent trunks instead of legs. Between them walked Kelli, the empousa cheerleader from my freshman orientation.

      “Hello, Luke,” Kelli smiled. She was wearing a red dress and she looked awesome, but I’d seen her real form. I knew what she was hiding: mismatched legs, red eyes, fangs, and flaming hair.

      “What is it, demon?” Luke’s voice was cold. “I told you not to disturb me.”

      Kelli pouted. “That’s not very nice. You look tense. How about a nice shoulder massage?”

      Luke stepped back. “If you have something to report, say it. Otherwise leave!”

      “I don’t know why you’re so huffy these days. You used to be fun to hang around.”

      “That was before I saw what you did to that boy in Seattle.”

      “Oh, he meant nothing to me,” Kelli said. “Just a snack, really. You know my heart belongs to you, Luke.”

      “Thanks, but no thanks. Now report or get out.”

      Kelli shrugged. “Fine. The advanced team is ready, as you surprised. We can leave—” She frowned.

      “What is it?” Luke asked.

      “A presence,” Kelli said. “Your senses are getting dull, Luke. We’re being watched.”

      She scanned the stateroom. Her eyes focused right on me. Her face withered into a hag’s. She bared her fangs and lunged.

      * * *

      I woke with a start, my heart pounding. I could’ve sworn the empousa’ s fangs were an inch from my throat.

      Tyson was snoring in the next bunk. The sound calmed me down a little. I didn’t know how Kelli could sense me in a dream, but I’d heard more than I wanted to know. An army was ready. Kronos would lead it personally. All they needed was a way to navigate the Labyrinth so they could invade and destroy Camp Half-Blood, and Luke apparently thought that was going to happen very soon.

      I was tempted to go wake up Annabeth and tell her, middle of the night or not. Then I realized the room was lighter than it should have been. A blueand-green glow was coming from the saltwater fountain, brighter and more urgent than the night before. It was almost like the water was humming. I got out of bed and approached.

      No voice spoke out of the water this time, asking for a deposit. I got the feeling the fountain was waiting for me to make the first move. I probably should’ve gone back to bed. Instead I thought about what I’d seen last night—the weird image of Nico at the banks of the River Styx.

      “You’re trying to tell me something,” I said.

      No response from the fountain.

      “All right,” I said. “Show me Nico di Angelo.”

      I didn’t even throw a coin in, but this time it didn’t matter. It was like some other force had control of the water besides Iris the messenger goddess. The water shimmered. Nico appeared, but he was no longer in the Underworld. He was standing in a graveyard under a starry sky. Giant willow trees loomed all around him.

      He was watching some gravediggers at work. I heard shovels and saw dirt flying out of a hole. Nico was dressed in a black cloak. The night was foggy. It was warm and humid, and frogs were croaking. A large Wal-Mart bag sat next to Nico’s feet.

      “Is it deep enough yet?” Nico asked. He sounded irritated.

      “Nearly, my lord.” It was the same ghost I’d seen Nico with before, the faint shimmering image of a man. “But, my lord, I tell you, this is unnecessary. You already have me for advice.”

      “I want a second opinion!” Nico snapped his fingers, and the digging stopped. Two figures climbed out of the hole. They weren’t people. They were skeletons in ragged clothes.

      “You are dismissed,” Nico said. “Thank you.”

      The skeletons collapsed into piles of bones.

      “You might as well thank the shovels,” the ghost complained. “They have as much sense.”

      Nico ignored him. He reached into his Wal-Mart bag and pulled out a twelve-pack of Coke. He popped open a can. Instead of drinking it, he poured it into the grave.

      “Let the dead taste again,” he murmured. “Let them rise and take this offering. Let them remember.”

      He dropped the rest of the Cokes into the grave and pulled out a white paper bag decorated with cartoons. I hadn’t seen one in years, but I recognized it—a McDonald’s Happy Meal.

      He turned it upside down and shook the fries and hamburger into the grave.

      “In my day, we used animal blood,” the ghost mumbled. “It’s perfectly good enough. They can’t taste the difference.”

      “I will treat them with respect,” Nico said.

      “At least let me keep the toy,” the ghost said.

      “Be quiet!” Nico ordered. He emptied another twelve-pack of soda and three more Happy Meals into the grave, then began chanting in Ancient Greek. I caught only some of the words—a lot about the dead and memories and returning from the grave. Real happy stuff.

      The grave started to bubble. Frothy brown liquid rose to the top like the whole thing was filling with soda. The fog thickened. The frogs stopped croaking. Dozens of figures began to appear among the gravestones: bluish, vaguely human shapes. Nico had summoned the dead with Coke and cheeseburgers.

      “There are too many,” the ghost said nervously. “You don’t know your own powers.”

      “I’ve got it under control,” Nico said, though his voice sounded fragile. He drew his sword—a short blade made of solid black metal. I’d never seen anything like it. It wasn’t celestial bronze or steel. Iron, maybe? The crowd of shades retreated at the sight of it.

      “One at a time,” Nico commanded.

      A single figure floated forward and knelt at the pool. It made slurping sounds as it drank. Its ghostly hands scooped French fries out of the pool. When it stood again, I could see it much more clearly—a teenage guy in Greek armor. He had curly hair and green eyes, a clasp shaped like a seashell on his cloak.

      “Who are you?” Nico said. “Speak.”

      The young man frowned as if trying to remember. Then he spoke in a voice like dry, crumpling paper: “I am Theseus.”

      No way, I thought. This couldn’t be the Theseus. He was just a kid. I’d grown up hearing stories about him fighting the Minotaur and stuff, but I’d always pictured him as this huge, buff guy. The ghost I was looking at wasn’t strong or tall. And he wasn’t any older than I was.

      “How can I retrieve my sister?” Nico asked.

      Theseus’s eyes were lifeless as glass. “Do not try. It is madness.”

      “Just tell me!”

      “My stepfather died,” Theseus remembered. “He threw himself into the sea because he thought I was dead in the Labyrinth. I wanted to bring him back, but I could not.”

      Nico’s ghost hissed. “My lord, the soul exchange! Ask him about that!”

      Theseus scowled. “That voice. I know that voice.”

      “No you don’t, fool!” the ghost said. “Answer the lord’s questions and nothing more!”

      “I know you,” Theseus insisted, as if struggling to recall.

      “I want to hear about my sister,” Nico said. “Will this quest into the Labyrinth help me win her back?”

      Theseus was looking for the ghost, but apparently couldn’t see him. Slowly he turned his eyes back on Nico. “The Labyrinth is treacherous. There is only one thing that saw me through: the love of a mortal girl. The string was only part of the answer. It was the princess who guided me.”

      “We don’t need any of that,” the ghost said. “I will guide you, my lord. Ask him if it is true about an exchange of souls. He will tell you.”

      “A soul for a soul,” Nico asked. “Is it true?”

      “I—I must say yes. But the specter—”

      “Just answer the questions, knave!” the ghost said.

      Suddenly, around the edges of the pool, the other ghosts became restless. They stirred, whispering in nervous tones.

      “I want to see my sister!” Nico demanded. “Where is she?”

      “He is coming,” Theseus said fearfully. “He has sensed your summons. He comes.”

      “Who?” Nico demanded.

      “He comes to find the source of this power,” Theseus said. “You must release us.”

      The water in my fountain began to tremble, humming with power. I realized the whole cabin was shaking. The noise grew louder. The image of Nico in the graveyard started to glow until it was painful to watch.

      “Stop,” I said out loud. “Stop it!”

      The fountain began to crack. Tyson muttered in his sleep and turned over. Purple light threw horrible, ghostly shadows on the cabin walls, as if the specters were escaping right out of the fountain.

      In desperation I uncapped riptide and slashed at the fountain, cleaving it in two. Salt water spilled everywhere, and the great stone font crashed to the floor in pieces. Tyson snorted and muttered, but he kept sleeping. I sank to the ground, shivering from what I’d seen. Tyson found me there in the morning, still staring at the shattered remains of the saltwater fountain.

      * * *

      Just after dawn, the quest group met at Zeus’s Fist. I’d packed my knapsack—thermos with nectar, baggie of ambrosia, bedroll, rope, clothes, flashlights, and lots of extra batteries. I had Riptide in my pocket. The magic shield/wristwatch Tyson had made for me was on my wrist.

      It was a clear morning. The fog had burned off and the sky was blue. Campers would be having their lessons today, flying pegasi and practicing archery and scaling the lava wall. Meanwhile, we could be heading underground.

      Juniper and Grover stood apart from the group. Juniper had been crying again, but she was trying to keep it together for Grover’s sake. She kept fussing with his clothes, straightening his rasta cap and brushing goat fur off his shirt. Since we had no idea what we would encounter, he was dressed as a human, with the cap to hide his horns, and jeans, fake feet, and sneakers to hide his goat legs.

      Chiron, Quintus, and Mrs. O’Leary stood with the other campers who’d come to wish us well, but there was too much activity for it to feel like a happy send-off. A couple of tents had been set up by the rocks for guard duty. Beckendorf and his siblings were working on a line of defensive spikes and trenches. Chiron had decided we needed to guard the Labyrinth exit at all times, just in case.

      Annabeth was doing one last check on her supply pack. When Tyson and I came over, she frowned. “Percy, you look terrible.”

      “He killed the water fountain last night,” Tyson confided.

      “What?” she asked.

      Before I could explain, Chiron trotted over. “Well, it appears you are ready!”

      He tried to sound upbeat, but I could tell he was anxious. I didn’t want to freak him out any more, but I thought about last night’s dream, and before I could change my mind, I said, “Hey, uh, Chiron, can I ask you a favor while I’m gone?”

      “Of course, my boy.”

      “Be right back, guys.” I nodded toward the woods. Chiron asked an eyebrow, but he followed me out of earshot.

      “Last night,” I said, “I dreamed about Luke and Kronos.” I told him the details. The news seemed to weigh on his shoulders.

      “I feared this,” Chiron said. “Against my father, Kronos, we would stand no chance in a fight.”

      Chiron rarely called Kronos his father. I mean, we all knew it was true. Everybody in the Greek world—god, monster, or Titan—was related to one another somehow. But it wasn’t exactly something Chiron liked to brag about. Oh, my dad is the all-powerful evil Titan lord who wants to destroy Western Civilization. I want to be just like him when I grow up!

      “Do you know what he meant about a bargain?” I asked.

      “I am not sure, but I fear they seek to make a deal with Daedalus. If the old inventor is truly alive, if he has not been driven insane by millennia in the Labyrinth…well, Kronos can find ways to twist anyone to his will.”

      “Not anyone,” I promised.

      Chiron managed a smile. “No. Perhaps not anyone. But, Percy, you must beware. I have worried for some time that Kronos may be looking for Daedalus for a different reason, not just passage through the maze.”

      “What else would he want?”

      “Something Annabeth and I were discussing. Do you remember what you told me about your first trip to the Princess Andromeda, the first time you saw the golden coffin?”

      I nodded. “Luke was taking about raising Kronos, little pieces of him appearing in the coffin every time someone new joined his cause.”

      “And what did Luke say they would do when Kronos had risen completely?”

      A chill went down my spine. “He said they would make Kronos a new body, worthy of the forges of Hephaestus.”

      “Indeed,” Chiron said. “Daedalus was the world’s greatest inventor. He created

      the

      Labyrinth,

      but

      much

      more.

      Automatons,

      thinking

      machines…What if Kronos wishes Daedalus to make him a new form?”

      That was a real pleasant thought.

      “We’ve got to get to Daedalus first,” I said, “and convince him not to.”

      Chiron stared off into the trees. “One other thing I do not understand…this talk of a last soul joining their cause. That does not bode well.”

      I kept my mouth shut, but I felt guilty. I’d made the decision not to tell Chiron about Nico being a son of Hades. The mention of souls, though—

      What if Kronos knew about Nico? What if he managed to turn him evil? It was almost enough to make me want to tell Chiron, but I didn’t. for one thing, I wasn’t sure Chiron could do anything about it. I had to find Nico myself. I had to explain things to him, make him listen.

      “I don’t know,” I said at last. “But, uh, something Juniper said, maybe you should hear.” I told him how the tree nymph had seen Quintus poking around the rocks.

      Chiron’s jaw tightened. “That does not surprise me.”

      “It doesn’t sur—you mean you know?”

      “Percy, when Quintus showed up at camp offering his services…well, I would have to be a fool not to be suspicious.”

      “Then why did you let him in?”

      “Because sometimes it is better to have someone you mistrust close to you, so that you can keep an eye on him. He may be just what he says: a halfblood in search of a home. Certainly he has done nothing openly that would make me question his loyalty. But believe me. I will keep an eye—”

      Annabeth trudged over, probably curious why we were taking so long.

      “Percy, you ready?”

      I nodded. My hand slipped into my pocket, where I kept the ice whistle Quintus had given me. I looked over and saw Quintus watching me carefully. He raised his hand in farewell.

      Our spies report success, Luke had said. The same day we decided to send a quest, Luke had known about it.

      “Take care,” Chiron told us. “And good hunting.”

      “You too,” I said.

      We walked over to the rocks, where Tyson and Grover were waiting. I stared at the crack between the boulders—the entrance that was about to swallow us.

      “Well,” Grover said nervously, “good-bye sunshine.”

      “Hello rocks,” Tyson agreed.

      And together, the four of us descended into darkness.

    7. #7
      SIX
      WE MEET THE GOD WITH TWO FACES



      We made it a hundred feet before we were hopelessly lost. The tunnel looked nothing like the one Annabeth and I had stumbled into before. Now it was round like a sewer, constructed of red brick with ironbarred portholes ever ten feet. I shined a light through one of the portholes out of curiosity, but I couldn’t see anything. It opened into infinite darkness. I thought I heard voices on the other side, but it may have been just the cold wind.

      Annabeth tried her best to guide us. She had this idea that we should stick to the left wall.

      “If we keep one hand on the left wall and follow it,” she said, “we should be able to find our way out again by reversing course.”

      Unfortunately, as soon as she said that, the left wall disappeared. We found ourselves in the middle of a circular chamber with eight tunnels leading out, and no idea how we’d gotten there.

      “Um, which way did we come in?” Grover said nervously.

      “Just turn around,” Annabeth said.

      We each turned toward a different tunnel. It was ridiculous. None of us could decide which way led back to camp.

      “Left walls are mean,” Tyson said. “Which way now?”

      Annabeth swept her flashlight beam over the archways of the eight tunnels. As far as I could tell, they were identical. “That way,” she said.

      “How do you know?” I asked.

      “Deductive reasoning.”

      “So…you’re guessing.”

      “Just come on,” she said.

      The tunnel she’d chosen narrowed quickly. The walls turned to gray cement, and the ceiling got so low that pretty soon we were hunching over. Tyson was forced to crawl.

      Grover’s hyperventilating was the loudest noise in the maze. “I can’t stand it anymore,” he whispered. “Are we there yet?”

      “We’ve been down here maybe five minutes,” Annabeth told him.

      “It’s been longer than that,” Grover insisted. “And why would Pan be down here? This is the opposite of the wild!”

      We kept shuffling forward. Just when I was sure the tunnel would get so narrow it would squish us, it opened into a huge room. I shined my light around the walls and said, “Whoa.”

      The whole room was covered in mosaic tiles. The pictures were grimy and faded, but I could still make out the colors—red, blue, green, gold. The frieze showed the Olympian gods at a feast. There was my dad, Poseidon, with his trident, holding out grapes for Dionysus to turn into wine. Zeus was partying with satyrs, and Hermes was flying through the air on his winged sandals. The pictures were beautiful, but they weren’t very accurate. I’d seen the gods. Dionysus was not that handsome, and Hermes’s nose wasn’t that big.

      In the middle of the room was a three-tiered fountain. It looked like it hadn’t held water in a long time.

      “What is this place?” I muttered. “It looks—”

      “Roman,” Annabeth said. “Those mosaics area bout two thousand years old.”

      “But how can they be Roman?” I wasn’t that great on ancient history, but I was pretty sure the Roman Empire never made it as far as Long Island.

      “The Labyrinth is a patchwork,” Annabeth said. “I told you, it’s always expanding, adding pieces. It’s the only work of architecture that grows by itself.”

      “You make it sound like it’s alive.”

      A groaning noise echoed from the tunnel in front of us.

      “Let’s not talk about it being alive,” Grover whimpered. “Please?”

      “All right,” Annabeth said. “Forward.”

      “Down the hall with the bad sounds?” Tyson said. Even he looked nervous.

      “Yeah,” Annabeth said. “The architecture is getting older. That’s a good sign. Daedalus’s workshop would be in the oldest part.”

      That made sense. But soon the maze was toying with us—we went fifty feet and the tunnel turned back to cement, with brass pipes running down the sides. The walls were spray-painted with graffiti. A neon tagger sign read MOZ RULZ.

      “I’m thinking this is not Roman,” I said helpfully.

      Annabeth took a deep breath, then forged ahead.

      Every few feet the tunnels twisted and turned and branched off. The floor beneath us changed from cement to mud to bricks and back again. There was no sense to any of it. We stumbled into a wince cellar—a bunch of dusty bottles in wooden racks—like we were walking through somebody’s basement, only there was no exit above us, just more tunnels leading on. Later the ceiling turned to wooden planks, and I could hear voices above us and the creaking of footsteps, as if we were walking under some kind of bar. It was reassuring to hear people, but then again, we couldn’t get to them. We were stuck down here with no way out. Then we found our first skeleton. He was dressed in white clothes, like some kind of uniform. A wooden crate of glass bottles sat next to him.

      “A milkman,” Annabeth said.

      “What?” I asked.

      “They used to deliver milk.”

      “Yeah, I know what they are, but…that was when my mom was little, like a million years ago. What’s he doing here?”

      “Some people wander in by mistake,” Annabeth said. “Some come exploring on purpose and never make it back. A long time ago, the Cretans sent people in here as human sacrifices.”

      Grover gulped. “He’s been down here a long time.” He pointed to the skeleton’s bottles, which were coated with white dust. The skeleton’s fingers were clawing at the brick wall, like he had died trying to get out.

      “Only bones,” Tyson said. “Don’t worry, goat boy. The milkman is dead.”

      “The milkman doesn’t bother me,” Grover said. “It’s the smell. Monsters. Can’t you smell it?”

      Tyson nodded. “Lots of monsters. But underground smells like that. Monsters and dead milk people.”

      “Oh, good,” Grover whimpered. “I thought maybe I was wrong.”

      “We have to get deeper into the maze,” Annabeth said. “There has to be a way to the center.”

      She led us to the right, then the left, through a corridor of stainless steel like some kind of air shaft, and we arrived back in the Roman tile room with the fountain.

      This time, we weren’t alone.

      * * *

      What I noticed first were his faces. Both of them. They jutted out from either side of his head, staring over his shoulders, so his head was much wider than it should’ve been, kind of like a hammerhead shark’s looking straight at him, all I saw were two overlapping ears and mirror-image sideburns.

      He was dressed like a New York City doorman: a long black overcoat, shiny shoes, and a black top-hat that somehow managed to stay on his double-wide head.

      “Well, Annabeth?” said his left face. “Hurry up!”

      “Don’t mind him,” said the right face. “He’s terribly rude. Right this way, miss.”

      Annabeth’s jaw dropped. “Uh…I don’t…”

      Tyson frowned. “That funny man has two faces.”

      “The funny man has ears, you know!” the left face scolded. “Now come along, miss.”

      “No, no,” the right face said. “This way, miss. Talk to me, please.”

      The two-faced man regarded Annabeth as best he could out of the corners of his eyes. It was impossible to look at him straight on without focusing on one side or the other. And suddenly I realized that’s what he was asking—he wanted Annabeth to choose.

      Behind him were two exits, blocked by wooden doors with huge iron locks. They hadn’t been there our first time through the room. The two-faced doorman held a silver key, which he kept passing from his left hand to his right hand. I wondered if this was a different room completely, but the frieze of the gods looked exactly the same.

      Behind us, the doorway we’d come through had disappeared, replaced by more mosaics. We wouldn’t be going back the way we came.

      “The exits are closed,” Annabeth said.

      “Duh!” the man’s left face said.

      “Where do they lead?” she asked.

      “One probably leads the way you wish to go,” the right face said encouragingly. “The other leads to certain death.”

      “I—I know who you are,” Annabeth said.

      “Oh, you’re a smart one!” The left face sneered. “But do you know which way to choose? I don’t have all day.”

      “Why are you trying to confuse me?” Annabeth asked.

      The right face smiled. “You’re in charge now, my dear. All the decisions are on your shoulders. That’s what you wanted, isn’t it?”

      “I—”

      “We know you, Annabeth,” the left face said. “We know what you wrestle with every day. We know your indecision. You will have to make your choice sooner or later. And the choice may kill you.”

      I didn’t know what they were talking about, but it sounded like it was about more than a choice between doors.

      The color drained out of Annabeth’s face. “No…I don’t—”

      “Leave her alone,” I said. “Who are you, anyway?”

      “I’m your best friend,” the right face said.

      “I’m your worst enemy,” the left face said.

      “I’m Janus,” both faces said in harmony. “God of Doorways. Beginnings. Endings. Choices.”

      “I’ll see you soon enough, Perseus Jackson,” said the right face. “But for now it’s Annabeth’s turn.” He laughed giddily. “Such fun!”

      “Shut up!” his left face said. “This is serious. One bad choice can ruin your whole life. It can kill you and all of your friends. But no pressure, Annabeth. Choose!”

      With a sudden chill, I remembered the words of the prophecy: the child of Athena’s final stand.

      “Don’t do it,” I said.

      “I’m afraid she has to,” the right face said cheerfully.

      Annabeth moistened her lips. “I—I chose—”

      Before she could point to a door, a brilliant light flooded the room. Janus raised his hands to either side of his head to cover his eyes. When the light died, a woman was standing at the fountain.

      She was tall and graceful with long hair the color of chocolate, braided in plaits with gold ribbons. She wore a simple white dress, but when she moved, the fabric shimmered with colors like oil on water.

      “Janus,” she said, “are we causing trouble again?”

      “N-no, milady!” Janus’s right face stammered.

      “Yes!” the left face said.

      “Shut up!” the right face said.

      “Excuse me?” the woman asked.

      “Not you, milady! I was talking to myself.”

      “I see,” the lady said. “You know very well your visit is premature. The girl’s time has not yet come. So I give you a choice: leave these heroes to me, or I shall turn you into a door and break you down.”

      “What kind of door?” the left face asked.

      “Shut up!” the right face said.

      “Because French doors are nice,” the left face mused. “Lots of natural light.”

      “Shut up!” the right face wailed. “Not you, milady! Of course I’ll leave. I was just having a bit of fun. Doing my job. Offering choices.”

      “Causing indecision,” the woman corrected. “Now be gone!”

      The left face muttered, “Party power,” then he raised his silver key, inserted it into the air, and disappeared.

      The woman turned toward us, and fear closed around my heart. Her eyes shined with power. Leave these heroes to me. That didn’t sound good. For a second, I almost wished we could’ve taken our chances with Janus. But then the woman smiled.

      “You must be hungry,” she said. “Sit with me and talk.”

      She waved her hand, and the old Roman fountain began to flow. Jets of clear water sprayed into the air. A marble table appeared, laden with platters of sandwiches and pitchers of lemonade.

      “Who…who are you?” I asked.

      “I am Hera.” The woman smiled. “Queen of Heaven.”

      * * *

      I’d seen Hera once before at a Council of the Gods, but I hadn’t paid much attention to her. At the time I’d been surrounded by a bunch of other gods who were debating whether or not to kill me.

      I didn’t remember her looking so normal. Of course, gods are usually twenty feet tall when they’re on Olympus, so that makes them look a lot less normal. But now, Hera looked like a regular mom.

      She served us sandwiches and poured lemonade.

      “Grover, dear,” she said, “use your napkin. Don’t eat it.”

      “Yes, ma’am,” Grover said.

      “Tyson, you’re wasting away. Would you like another peanut butter sandwich?”

      Tyson stifled a belch. “Yes, nice lady.”

      “Queen Hera,” Annabeth said. “I can’t believe it. What are you doing in the Labyrinth?”

      Hera smiled. She flicked one finger and Annabeth’s hair combed itself. All the dirt and grime disappeared from her face.

      “I came to see you, naturally,” the goddess said.

      Grover and I exchanged nervous looks. Usually when the gods come looking for you, it’s not out of the goodness of their hearts. It’s because they want something.

      Still, that didn’t keep me from chowing down on turkey-and-Swiss sandwiches and chips and lemonade. I hadn’t realized how hungry I was. Tyson was inhaling one peanut butter sandwich after another, and Grover was loving the lemonade, crunching the Styrofoam cup like an ice-cream cone.

      “I didn’t think—” Annabeth faltered. “Well, I didn’t think you liked heroes.”

      Hera smiled indulgently. “Because of that little spat I had with Hercules?

      Honestly, I got so much bad press because of one disagreement.”

      “Didn’t you try to kill him, like, a lot of times?” Annabeth asked. Hera waved her hand dismissively. “Water under the bridge, my dear. Besides, he was one of my loving husband’s children by another woman. My patience wore thin, I’ll admit it. But Zeus and I have had some excellent marriage counseling sessions since then. We’ve aired our feelings and come to an understanding—especially after that last little incident.”

      “You mean when he sired Thalia?” I guessed, but immediately wished I hadn’t. As soon as I said the name of our friend, the half-blood daughter of Zeus, Hera’s eyes turned toward me frostily.

      “Percy Jackson, isn’t it? One of Poseidon’s…children.” I got the feeling she was thinking of another word besides children. “As I recall, I voted to let you live at the winter solstice. I hope I voted correctly.”

      She turned back to Annabeth with a sunny smile. “At any rate, I certainly bear you no ill will, my girl. I appreciate the difficulty of your quest. Especially when you have troublemakers like Janus to deal with.”

      Annabeth lowered her gaze. “Why was he here? He was driving me crazy.”

      “Trying to,” Hera agreed. “You must understand, the minor gods like Janus have always been frustrated by the small parts they play in the universe. Some, I fear, have little love for Olympus, and could easily be swayed to support the rise of my father.”

      “Your father?” I said. “Oh, right.”

      I’d forgotten that Kronos was Hera’s dad, too, along with being the father to Zeus, Poseidon, and all the eldest Olympians. I guess that made Kronos my grandfather, but that thought was so weird I put it out of my mind.

      “We must watch the minor gods,” Hera said. “Janus. Hecate. Morpheus. They give lip service to Olympus, and yet—”

      “That’s where Dionysus went,” I remembered. “He was checking on the minor gods.”

      “Indeed.” Hera stared at the fading mosaics of the Olympians. “You see, in times of trouble, even gods can lose faith. They start putting their trust in the wrong things. They stop looking at the big picture and start being selfish. But I’m the goddess of marriage, you see. I’m used to perseverance. You have to rise above the squabbling and chaos, and keep believing. You have to always keep your goals in mind.”

      “What are your goals?” Annabeth asked.

      She smiled. “To keep my family, the Olympians, together, of course. At the moment, the best way I can do that is by helping you. Zeus does not allow me to interfere much, I am afraid. But once every century or so, for a quest I care deeply about, he allows me to grant a wish.”

      “A wish?”

      “Before you ask it, let me give you some advice, which I can do for free. I know you see Daedalus. His Labyrinth is as much a mystery to me as it is to you. But if you want to know his fate, I would visit my son Hephaestus at his forge. Daedalus was a great inventor, a mortal after Hephaestus’s heart. There has never been a mortal Hephaestus admired more. If anyone would have kept up with Daedalus and could tell you his fate, it is Hephaestus.”

      “But how do we get there?” Annabeth asked. “That’s my wish. I want a way to navigate the Labyrinth.”

      Hera looked disappointed. “So be it. You wish for something, however, that you have already been given.”

      “I don’t understand.”

      “The means is already within your grasp.” She looked at me. “Percy knows the answer.”

      “I do?”

      “But that’s not fair,” Annabeth said. “You’re not telling me what it is!”

      Hera shook her head. “Getting something and having the wits to use it…those are two different things. I’m sure your mother Athena would agree.”

      The room rumbled like distant thunder. Hera stood. “That would be my cue. Zeus grows impatient. Think on what I have said, Annabeth. Seek out Hephaestus. You will have to pass through the ranch, I imagine. But keep going. And use all the means at your disposal, however common they may seem.”

      She pointed toward the two doors and they melted away, revealing twin corridors, open and dark. “One last thing, Annabeth. I have postponed your day of choice, I have not prevented it. Soon, as Janus said, you will have to make a decision. Farewell!”

      She waved a hand and turned into white smoke. So did the food, just as Tyson chomped down on a sandwich that turned to mist in his mouth. The fountain trickled to a stop. The mosaic walls dimmed and turned grungy and faded again. The room was no longer any place you’d want to have a picnic. Annabeth stamped her foot. “What sort of help was that? ‘Here, have a sandwich. Make a wish. Oops, I can’t help you!’ Poof!”

      “Poof,” Tyson agreed sadly, looking at his empty plate.

      “Well,” Grover sighed, “she said Percy knows the answer. That’s something.”

      They all looked at me.

      “But I don’t,” I said. “I don’t know what she was talking about.”

      Annabeth sighed. “All right. Then we’ll just keep going.”

      “Which way?” I asked. I really wanted to ask what Hera had meant—

      about the choice Annabeth needed to make. But then Grove and Tyson both tensed. They stood up together like they’d rehearsed it. “Left,” they both said.

      Annabeth frowned. “How can you be sure?”

      “Because something is coming from the right,” Grover said.

      “Something big,” Tyson agreed. “In a hurry.”

      “Left is sounding pretty good,” I decided. Together we plunged into the dark corridor.


    8. #8
      SEVEN
      TYSON LEADS A JAILBREAK


      The good news: the left tunnel was straight with no side exits, twists, or turns. The bad news; it was a dead end. After sprinting a hundred yards, we ran into an enormous boulder that completely blocked our path. Behind us, the sounds of dragging footsteps and heavy breathing echoed down the corridor. Something—definitely not human—was on our tail.

      “Tyson,” I said, “can you—”

      “Yes!” He slammed his shoulder against the rock so hard the whole tunnel shook. Dust trickled from the stone ceiling.

      “Hurry!” Grover said. “Don’t bring the roof down, but hurry!”

      The boulder finally gave way with a horrible grinding noise. Tyson pushed it into a small room and we dashed through behind it.

      “Close the entrance!” Annabeth said.

      We all got on the other side of the boulder and pushed. Whatever was chasing us wailed in frustration as we heaved the rock back into placed and sealed the corridor.

      “We trapped it,” I said.

      “Or trapped ourselves,” Grover said.

      I turned. We were in a twenty-foot-square cement room and the opposite wall was covered with metal bars. We’d tunneled straight into a cell.

      * * *

      “What in Hades?” Annabeth tugged on the bars. They didn’t budge. Through the bars we could see rows of cells in a ring around a dark courtyard—at least three stories of metal doors and metal catwalks.

      “A prison,” I said. “Maybe Tyson can break—”

      “Shh,” said Grover. “Listen.”

      Somewhere above us, deep sobbing echoed through the building. There was another sound, too—a raspy voice muttering something that I couldn’t make out. The words were strange, like rocks in a tumbler.

      “what’s that language?” I whispered.

      Tyson’s eye widened. “Can’t be.”

      “What?” I asked.

      He grabbed two bars on our cell door and bent them wide enough for even a Cyclops to slip through.

      “Wait!” Grover called.

      But Tyson wasn’t about to wait. We ran after him. The prison was dark, only a few dim fluorescent lights flickering above.

      “I know this place,” Annabeth told me. “This is Alcatraz.”

      “You mean that island is near San Francisco?”

      She nodded. “My school took a field trip here. It’s like a museum.”

      It didn’t seem possible that we could’ve popped out of the Labyrinth on the other side of the country, but Annabeth had been living in San Francisco all year, keeping an eye on Mount Tamalpais just across the bay. She probably knew what she was talking about.

      “Freeze,” Grover warned.

      But Tyson kept going. Grover grabbed his arm and pulled him back with all his strength. “Stop, Tyson!” he whispered. “Can’t you see it?”

      I looked where he was pointing, and my stomach did a somersault. On the second-floor balcony, across the courtyard, was a monster more horrible than anything I’d ever seen before.

      It was sort of like a centaur, with a woman’s body from the waist up. But instead of a horse’s lower body, it had the body of a dragon—at least twenty feet long, black and scaly with enormous claws and a barbed tail. Her legs looked like they were tangled in vines, but then I realized they were sprouting snakes, hundreds of vipers darting around, constantly looking for something to bite. The woman’s hair was also made of snakes, like Medusa’s. weirdest of all, around her waist, where the woman part met the dragon part, her skin bubbled and morphed, occasionally producing the heads of animals—a vicious wolf, a bear, a lion, as if she were wearing a belt of ever-changing creatures. I got the feeling I was looking at something half formed, a monster so old it was from the beginning of time, before shapes had been fully defined.

      “It’s her,” Tyson whimpered.

      “Get down!” Grover said.

      We crouched in the shadows, but the monster wasn’t paying us any attention. It seemed to be talking to someone inside a cell on the second floor. That’s where the sobbing was coming from. The dragon woman said something in her weird rumbling language.

      “What’s she saying?” I muttered. “What’s that language?”

      “The tongue of the old times.” Tyson shivered. “What Mother Earth spoke to Titans and…her other children. Before the gods.”

      “You understand it?” I asked. “Can you translate?”

      Tyson closed his eyes and began to speak in a horrible, raspy woman’s voice. “You will work for the master or suffer.”

      Annabeth shuddered. “I hate it when he does that.”

      Like all Cyclopes, Tyson had superhuman hearing and an uncanny ability to mimic voices. It was almost like he entered a trance when he spoke in other voices.

      “I will not serve,” Tyson said in a deep, wounded voice.

      He switched to the monster’s voice: “Then I shall enjoy your pain, Briares.” Tyson faltered when he said that name. I’d never heard him break character when he was mimicking somebody, but he let out a strangled gulp. Then he continued in the monster’s voice. “If you thought your first imprisonment was unbearable, you have yet to feel true torment. Think on this until I return.”

      The dragon lady tromped toward the stairwell, vipers hissing around her legs like grass skirts. She spread wings that I hadn’t noticed before—huge bad wings she kept folded against her dragon back. She leaped off the catwalk and soared across the courtyard. We crouched lower in the shadows. A hot sulfurous wind blasted my face as the monster flew over. Then she disappeared around the corner.

      “H-h-horrible,” Grover said. “I’ve never smelled any monster that strong.”

      “Cyclopes’ worst nightmare,” Tyson murmured. “Kampê.”

      “Who?” I asked.

      Tyson swallowed. “Every Cyclops knows about her. Stories about her scare us when we’re babies. She was our jailer in the bad years.”

      Annabeth nodded. “I remember now. When the Titans ruled, they imprisoned Gaea and Ouranos’s earlier children—the Cyclopes and the Hekatonkheires.”

      “The Heka-what?” I asked.

      “The Hundred-Handed Ones,” she said. “They called them that because…well, they had a hundred hands. They were elder brothers of the Cyclopes.”

      “Very powerful,” Tyson said. “Wonderful! As tall as the sky. So strong they could break mountains!”

      “Cool,” I said. “Unless you’re a mountain.”

      “Kampê was the jailer,” he said. “She worked for Kronos. She kept our brothers locked up in Tartarus, tortured them always, until Zeus came. He killed Kampê and freed Cyclopes and Hundred-Handed Ones to help fight against the Titans in the big war.”

      “And now Kampê is back,” I said.

      “Bad,” Tyson summed up.

      “So who’s in that cell?” I asked. “You said a name—”

      “Briares!” Tyson perked up. “He is a Hundred-Handed One. They are as tall as the sky and—”

      “Yeah,” I said. “They break mountains.”

      I looked up at the cells above us, wondering how something as tall as the sky could fit in a tiny cell, and why he was crying.

      “I guess we should check it out,” Annabeth said, “before Kampê comes back.”

      * * *

      As we approached the cell, the weeping got louder. When I first saw the creature inside, I wasn’t sure what I was looking at. He was human-size and his skin was very pale, the color of milk. He wore a loincloth like a big diaper. His feet seemed too big for his body, with cracked dirty toenails, eight toes on each foot. But the top half of his body was the weird part. He made Janus look downright normal. His chest sprouted more arms than I could count, in rows, all around his body. The arms looked like normal arms, but there were so many of them, all tangled together, that his chest looked kind of like a forkful of spaghetti somebody had twirled together. Several of his hands were covering his face as he sobbed.

      “Either the sky isn’t as tall as it used to be,” I muttered, “or he’s short.”

      Tyson didn’t pay any attention. He fell to his knees.

      “Briares!” he called.

      The sobbing stopped.

      “Great Hundred-Handed One!” Tyson said. “Help us!”

      Briars looked up. His face was long and sad, with a crooked nose and bad teeth. He had deep brown eyes—I mean completely brown with no whites or black pupils, like eyes formed out of clay.

      “Run while you can, Cyclops,” Briares said miserably. “I cannot even help myself.”

      “You are a Hundred-Handed One!” Tyson insisted. “You can do anything!”

      Briars wiped his nose with five or six hands. Several others were fidgeting with little pieces of metal and wood from a broken bed, the way Tyson always played with spare parts. It was amazing to watch. The hands seemed to have a mind of their own. They built a toy boat out of wood, then disassembled it just as fast. Other hands were scratching at the cement floor for no apparent reason. Others were playing rock, paper, scissors. A few others were making ducky and doggie shadow puppets against the wall.

      “I cannot,” Briares moaned. “Kampê is back! The Titans will rise and throw us back into Tartarus.”

      “Put on your brave face!” Tyson said.

      Immediately Briares’s face morphed into something else. Same brown eyes, but otherwise totally different features. He had an upturned nose, arched eyebrows, and a weird smile, like he was trying to act brave. But then his face turned back to what it had been before.

      “No good,” he said. “My scared face keeps coming back.”

      “How did you do that?” I asked.

      Annabeth elbowed me. “Don’t be rude. The Hundred-Handed Ones all have fifty different faces.”

      “Must make it hard to get a yearbook picture,” I said.

      Tyson was still entranced. “It will be okay, Briares! We will help you!

      Can I have your autograph?”

      Briares sniffled. “Do you have one hundred pens?”

      “Guys,” Grover interrupted. “We have to get out of here. Kampê will be back. She’ll sense us sooner or later.”

      “Break the bars,” Annabeth said.

      “Yes!” Tyson said, smiling proudly. “Briares can do it. He is very strong. Stronger than Cyclopes, even! Watch!”

      Briares whimpered. A dozen of his hands started playing patty-cake, but none of them made any attempt to break the bars.

      “If he’s so strong,” I said, “why is he stuck in jail?”

      Annabeth ribbed me again. “He’s terrified,” she whispered. “Kampê had imprisoned him in Tartarus for thousands of years. How would you feel?”

      The Hundred-Handed One covered his face again.

      “Briares?” Tyson asked. “What…what is wrong? Show us your great strength!”

      “Tyson,” Annabeth said, “I think you’d better break the bars.”

      Tyson’s smile melted slowly.

      “I will break the bars,” he repeated. He grabbed the cell door and ripped it off its hinges like it was made of wet clay.

      “Come on, Briares,” Annabeth said. “Let’s get you out of here.”

      She held out her hand. For a second, Briares’s face morphed to a hopeful expression. Several of his arms reached out, but twice as many slapped them away.

      “I cannot,” he said. “She will punish me.”

      “It’s all right,” Annabeth promised. “You fought the Titans before, and you won, remember?”

      “I remember the war.” Briares’s face morphed again—furrowed brow and a pouting mouth. His brooding face, I guess. “Lightning shook the world. We threw many rocks. The Titans and the monsters almost won. Now they are getting strong again. Kampê said so.”

      “Don’t listen to her,” I said. “Come on!”

      He didn’t move. I knew Grover was right. We didn’t have much time before Kampê returned. But I couldn’t just leave him here. Tyson would cry for weeks.

      “One game of rock, paper, scissors,” I blurted out. “If I win, you come with us. If I lose, we’ll leave you in jail.”

      Annabeth looked at me like I was crazy.

      Briares’s face morphed to doubtful. “I always win rock, paper, scissors.”

      “Then let’s do it!” I pounded my fist in my palm three times. Briares did the same with all one hundred hands, which sounded like an army marching three steps forward. He came up with a whole avalanche of rocks, a classroom set of scissors, and enough paper to make a fleet of airplanes.

      “I told you,” he said sadly. “I always—” His face morphed to confusion.

      “What is that you made?”

      “A gun,” I told him, showing him my finger gun. It was a trick Paul Blofis had pulled on me, but I wasn’t going to tell him that. “A gun beats anything.”

      “That’s not fair.”

      “I didn’t say anything about fair. Kampê’s not going to be fair if we hang around. She’s going to blame you for ripping off the bars. Now come on!”

      Briares sniffled. “Demigods are cheaters.” But he slowly rose to his feet and followed us out of the cell.

      I started to feel hopeful. All we had to do was get downstairs and find the Labyrinth entrance. But then Tyson froze.

      On the ground floor right below, Kampê was snarling at us.

      * * *

      “The other way,” I said.

      We bolted down the catwalk. This time Briares was happy to follow us. In fact he sprinted out front, a hundred arms waving in panic. Behind us, I heard the sound of giant wings as Kampê took to the air. She hissed and growled in her ancient language, but I didn’t need a translation to know she was planning to kill us.

      We scrambled down the stairs, through a corridor, and past a guard’s station—out into another block of prison cells.

      “Left,” Annabeth said. “I remember this from the tour.”

      We burst outside and found ourselves in the prison yard, ringed by security towers and barbed wire. After being inside for so long, the daylight almost blinded me. Tourists were milling around, taking pictures. The wind whipped cold off the bay. In the south, San Francisco gleamed all white and beautiful, but in the north, over Mount Tamalpais, huge storm clouds swirled. The whole sky seemed like a black top spinning from the mountain where Atlas was imprisoned, and where the Titan palace of Mount Othrys was rising anew. It was hard to believe the tourists couldn’t see the supernatural storm brewing, but they didn’t give any hint that anything was wrong.

      “It’s even worse,” Annabeth said, gazing to the north. “The storms have been bad all year, but that—”

      “Keep moving,” Briares wailed. “She is behind us!”

      We ran to the far end of the yard, as far from the cellblock as possible.

      “Kampê’s too big to get through the doors,” I said hopefully. Then the wall exploded.

      Tourists screamed as Kampê appeared from the dust and rubble, her wings spread out as wide as the yard. She was holding two swords—long bronze scimitars that glowed with a weird greenish aura, boiling wisps of vapor that smelled sour and hot even across the yard.

      “Poison!” Grover yelped. “Don’t let those things touch you or…”

      “Or we’ll die?” I guessed.

      “Well…after you shrivel slowly to dust, yes.”

      “Let’s avoid the swords,” I decided.

      “Briares, fight!” Tyson urged. “Grow to full size!”

      Instead, Briares looked like he was trying to shrink even smaller. He appeared to be wearing his absolutely terrified face. Kampê thundered toward us on her dragon legs, hundreds of snakes slithering around her body.

      For a second I thought about drawing Riptide and facing her, but my heart crawled into my throat. Then Annabeth said what I was thinking: “Run.”

      That was the end of the debate. There was no fighting this thing. We ran through the jail yard and out the gates of the prison, the monster right behind us. Mortals screamed and ran. Emergency sirens began to blare. We hit the wharf just as a tour boat was unloading. The new group of visitors froze as they saw us charging toward them, followed by a mob of frightened tourists, followed by…I don’t know what they saw through the Mist, but it could not have been good.

      “The boat?” Grover asked.

      “Too slow,” Tyson said. “Back into the maze. Only chance.”

      “We need a diversion,” Annabeth said.

      Tyson ripped a metal lamppost out of the ground. “I will distract Kampê. You run ahead.”

      “I’ll help you,” I said.

      “No,” Tyson said. “You go. Poison will hurt Cyclopes. A lot of pain. But it won’t kill.”

      “Are you sure?”

      “Go, brother. I will meet you inside.”

      I hated the idea. I’d almost lost Tyson once before, and I didn’t want to ever risk that again. But there was no time to argue, and I had no better idea. Annabeth, Grover, and I each took one of Briares’s hands and dragged him toward the concession stands while Tyson bellowed, lowered his pole, and charged Kampê like a jousting knight.

      She’d been glaring at Briares, but Tyson got her attention as soon as he nailed her in the chest with the pole, pushing her back into the wall. She shrieked and slashed with her swords, slicing the pole to shreds. poison dripped in pools all around her, sizzling into the cement. Tyson jumped back as Kampê’s hair lashed and hissed, and the vipers around her legs darted their tongues in every direction. A lion popped out of the weird half-formed faces around her waist and roared.

      As we sprinted for the cellblocks, the last thing I saw was Tyson picking up a Dippin’ Dots stand and throwing it at Kampê. Ice cream and poison exploded everywhere, all the little snakes in Kampê’s hair dotted with tuttifrutti. We dashed back into the jail yard.

      “Can’t make it,” Briares huffed.

      “Tyson is risking his life to help you!” I yelled at him. “You will make it.”

      As we reached the door of the cellblock, I heard an angry roar. I glanced back and saw Tyson running toward us at full speed, Kampê right behind him. She was plastered in ice cream and T-shirts. One of the bear heads on her waist was now wearing a pair of crooked plastic Alcatraz sunglasses.

      “Hurry!” Annabeth said, like I needed to be told that.

      We finally found the cell where we’d come in, but the back wall was completely smooth—no sign of a boulder or anything.

      “Look for the mark!” Annabeth said.

      “There!” Grover touched a tiny scratch, and it became a Greek ∆. The mark of Daedalus glowed blue, and the stone wall grinded open. Too slowly. Tyson was coming through the cellblock, Kampê’s swords lashing out behind him, slicing indiscriminately through cell bars and stone walls.

      I pushed Briares inside the maze, then Annabeth and Grover.

      “You can do it!” I told Tyson. But immediately I knew he couldn’t Kampê was gaining. She raised her swords. I need a distraction—something big. I slapped my wristwatch and it spiraled into a bronze shield. Desperately, I threw it at the monster’s face.

      SMACK! The shield hit her in the face and she faltered just long enough for Tyson to dive past me into the maze. I was right behind him. Kampê charged, but she was too late. The stone door closed and its magic sealed us in. I could feel the whole tunnel shake as Kampê pounded against it, roaring furiously. We didn’t stick around to play knock, knock with her, though. We raced into the darkness, and for the first time (and the last) I was glad to be back in the Labyrinth.


    9. #9
      EIGHT
      WE VISIT THE DEMON DUDE RANCH



      We finally stopped in a room full of waterfalls. The floor was one big pit, ringed by a slippery stone walkway. Around us, on all four walls, water tumbled from huge pipes. The water spilled down into the pit, and even when I shined a light, I couldn’t see the bottom.

      Briares slumped against the wall. He scooped up water in a dozen hands and washed his face. “This pit goes straight to Tartarus,” he murmured. “I should jump in and save you trouble.”

      “Don’t talk that way,” Annabeth told him. “You can come back to camp with us. You can help us prepare. You know more about fighting Titans than anybody.”

      “I have nothing to offer,” Briares said. “I have lost everything.”

      “What about your brothers?” Tyson asked. “The other two must stand tall as mountains! We can take you to them.”

      Briares’s expression morphed to something even sadder: his grieving face.

      “They are no more. They faded.”

      The waterfalls thundered. Tyson stared into the pit and blinked tears out of his eye.

      “What exactly do you mean, they faded?” I asked. “I thought monsters were immortal, like the gods.”

      “Percy,” Grover said weakly, “even immortality has limits. Sometimes…sometimes monsters get forgotten and they lose their will to stay immortal.”

      Looking at Grover’s face, I wondered if he was thinking of Pan. I remembered something Medusa had told us once: how her sisters, the other two gorgons, had passed on and left her alone. Then last year Apollo said something about the old god Helios disappearing and leaving him with the duties of the sun god. I’d never thought about it too much, but now, looking at Briares, I realized how terrible it would be to be so old—thousands and thousands of years old—and totally alone.

      “I must go,” Briares said.

      “Kronos’s army will invade camp,” Tyson said. “We need help.”

      Briares hung his head. “I cannot, Cyclops.”

      “You are strong.”

      “Not anymore.” Briares rose.

      “Hey,” I grabbed one of his arms and pulled him aside, where the roar of the water would hide our words. “Briares, we need you. In case you haven’t noticed, Tyson believes in you. He risked his life for you.”

      I told him about everything—Luke’s invasion plan, the Labyrinth entrance at camp, Daedalus’s workshop, Kronos’s golden coffin. Briares just shook his head. “I cannot, demigod. I do not have a finger gun to win this game.” To prove his point, he made one hundred finger guns.

      “Maybe that’s why monsters fade,” I said. “Maybe it’s not about what the mortals believe. Maybe it’s because you give up on yourself.”

      His pure brown eyes regarded me. His face morphed into an expression I recognized—shame. Then he turned and trudged off down the corridor until he was lost in the shadows.

      Tyson sobbed.

      “It’s okay,” Grover hesitantly patted his shoulder, which must’ve taken all his courage.

      Tyson sneezed. “It’s not okay, goat boy. He was my hero.”

      I wanted to make him feel better, but I wasn’t sure what to say. Finally Annabeth stood and shouldered her backpack. “Come on, guys. This pit is making me nervous. Let’s find a better place to camp for the night.”

      * * *

      We settled in a corridor made of huge marble blocks. It looked like it could’ve been part of a Greek tomb, with bronze torch holders fastened to the walls. It had to be an older part of the maze, and Annabeth decided this was a good sign.

      “We must be close to Daedalus’s workshop,” she said. “Get some rest, everybody. We’ll keep going in the morning.”

      “How do we know when it’s morning?” Grover asked.

      “Just rest,” she insisted.

      Grover didn’t need to be told twice. He pulled a heap of straw out of his pack, ate some of it, made a pillow out of the rest, and was snoring in no time. Tyson took longer getting to sleep. He tinkered with some metal scraps from his building kit for a while, but whatever he was making, he wasn’t happy with it. He kept disassembling the pieces.

      “I’m sorry I lost the shield,” I told him. “You worked so hard to repair it.”

      Tyson looked up. His eye was bloodshot from crying. “Do not worry, brother. You saved me. You wouldn’t have had to if Briares had helped.”

      “He was just scared,” I said. “I’m sure he’ll get over it.”

      “He is not strong,” Tyson said. “He is not important anymore.”

      He heaved a big sad sigh, then closed his eye. The metal pieces fell out of his hand, still unassembled, and Tyson began to snore.

      I tried to fall asleep myself, but I couldn’t. something about getting chased by a large dragon lady with poison swords made it real hard to relax. I picked up my bedroll and dragged it over to where Annabeth was sitting, keeping watch.

      I sat down next to her.

      “You should sleep,” she said.

      “Can’t. You doing all right?”

      “Sure. First day leading the quest. Just great.”

      “We’ll get there,” I said. “We’ll find the workshop before Luke does.”

      She brushed her hair out of her face. She had a smudge of dirt on her chin, and I imagined what she must’ve looked like when she was little, wandering around the country with Thalia and Luke. Once she’d saved them from the mansion of the evil Cyclops when she was only seven. Even when she looked scared, like now, I knew she had a lot of guts.

      “I just wish the quest was logical,” she complained. “I mean, we’re traveling but we have no idea where we’ll end up. How can you walk from New York to California in a day?”

      “Space isn’t the same in the maze.”

      “I know, I know. It’s just…” She looked at me hesitantly. “Percy, I was kidding myself. All that planning and reading, I don’t have a clue where we’re going.”

      “You’re doing great. Besides, we never know what we’re doing. It always works out. Remember Circe’s island?”

      She snorted. “You made a cute guinea pig.”

      “And Waterland, how you got us thrown off that ride?”

      “I got us thrown off? That was totally your fault!”

      “See? It’ll be fine.”

      She smiled, which I was glad to see, but the smile faded quickly.

      “Percy, what did Hera mean when she said you knew the way to get through the maze?”

      “I don’t know,” I admitted. “Honestly.”

      “You’d tell me if you did?”

      “Sure. Maybe…”

      “Maybe what?”

      “Maybe if you told me the last line of the prophecy, it would help.”

      Annabeth shivered. “Not here. Not in the dark.”

      “What about the choice Janus mentioned? Hera said—”

      “Stop,” Annabeth snapped. Then she took a shaky breath. “I’m sorry, Percy. I’m just stressed. But I don’t…I’ve got to think about it.”

      We sat in silence, listening to strange creaks and groans in the maze, the echo of stones grinding together as tunnels changed, grew, and expanded. The dark made me think about the visions I’d seen of Nico di Angelo, and suddenly I realized something.

      “Nico is down here somewhere,” I said. “That’s how he disappeared from camp. He found the Labyrinth. Then he found a path that led down even farther—to the Underworld. But now he’s back in the maze. He’s coming after me.”

      Annabeth was quiet for a long time. “Percy, I hope you’re wrong. But if you’re right…” she stared at the flashlight beam, casting a dim circle on the stone wall. I had a feeling she was thinking about her prophecy. I’d never seen her look more tired.

      “How about I take first watch?” I said. “I’ll wake you if anything happens.”

      Annabeth looked like she wanted to protest, but she just nodded, slumped into her bedroll, and closed her eyes.

      * * *

      When it was my turn to sleep, I dreamed I was back in the old man’s Labyrinth prison.

      It looked more like a workshop now. Tables were littered with measuring instruments. A forge burned red hot in the corner. The boy I’d seen in the last dream was stoking the bellows, except he was taller now, almost my age. A weird funnel device was attached to the forge’s chimney, trapping the smoke and heat and channeling it through a pipe into the floor, next to a big bronze manhole cover.

      It was daytime. The sky above was blue, but the walls of the maze cast deep shadows across the workshop. After being in tunnels so long, i found it weird that part of the Labyrinth could be open to the sky. Somehow that made the maze seem like even a crueler place.

      The old man looked sickly. He was terribly thin, his hands raw and red from working. White hair covered his eyes, and his tunic was smudged with grease. He was bent over a table, working on some kind of long metal patchwork—like a swath of chain mail. He picked up a delicate curl of bronze and fitted it into place.

      “Done,” he announced. “It’s done.”

      He picked up his project. It was so beautiful, my heart leaped—metal wings constructed from thousands of interlocking bronze feathers. There were two sets. One still lay on the table. Daedalus stretched the frame, and the wings expanded twenty feet. Part of me knew it could never fly. It was too heavy, and there’d be no way to get off the ground. But the craftsmanship was amazing. Metal feathers caught the light and flashed thirty different shades of gold.

      The boy left the bellows and ran over to see. He grinned, despite the fact that he was grimy and sweaty. “Father, you’re a genius!”

      The old man smiled. “Tell me something I don’t know, Icarus. Now hurry. It will take at least an hour to attach them. Come.”

      “You first,” Icarus said.

      The old man protested, but Icarus insisted. “You made them, Father. You should get the honor of wearing them first.”

      The boy attached a leather harness to his father’s chest, like climbing gear, with straps that ran from his shoulders to his wrists. Then he began fastening on the wings, using a metal canister that looked like an enormous hot-glue gun.

      “The wax compound should hold for several hours,” Daedalus said nervously as his son worked. “But we must let it set first. And we would do well to avoid flying too high or too low. The sea would wet the wax seals—”

      “And the sun’s heat would loosen them,” the boy finished. “Yes, Father. We’ve been through this a million times!”

      “One cannot be too careful.”

      “I have complete faith in your inventions, Father! No one has ever been as smart as you.”

      The old man’s eyes shone. It was obvious he loved his son more than anything in the world. “Now I will do your wings, and give mine a chance to set properly. Come!”

      It was slow going. The old man’s hands fumbled with the straps. He had a hard time keeping the wings in position while he sealed them. His own metal wings seemed to weigh him down, getting in his way while he tried to work.

      “Too slow,” the old man muttered. “I am too slow.”

      “Take your time, Father,” the boy said. “The guards aren’t due until—”

      BOOM!

      The workshop doors shuddered. Daedalus had barred them from the inside with a wooden brace, but still they shook on their hinges.

      “Hurry!” Icarus said.

      BOOM! BOOM!

      Something heavy was slamming into the doors. The brace held, but a crack appeared in the left door.

      Daedalus worked furiously. A drop of hot wax spilled onto Icarus’s shoulder. The boy winced but did not cry out. When his left wing was sealed into the straps, Daedalus began working on the right.

      “We must have more time,” Daedalus murmured. “They are too early! We need more time for the seal to hold.”

      “It’ll be fine,” Icarus said, as his father finished the right wing. “Help me with the manhole—”

      CRASH! The doors splintered and the head of a bronze battering ram emerged through the breach. Axes cleared the debris, and two armed guards entered the room, followed by the king with the golden crown and the spearshaped beard.

      “Well, well,” the king said with a cruel smile. “Going somewhere?”

      Daedalus and his son froze, their metal wings glimmering on their backs.

      “We’re leaving, Minos,” the old man said.

      King Minos chuckled. “I was curious to see how far you’d get on this little project before I dashed your hopes. I must say I’m impressed.”

      The king admired their wings. “You look like metal chickens,” he decided.

      “Perhaps we should pluck you and make a soup.”

      The guards laughed stupidly.

      “Metal chickens,” one repeated. “Soup.”

      “Shut up,” the king said. Then he turned again to Daedalus. “You let my daughter escape, old man. You drove my wife to madness. You killed my monster and made me the laughingstock of the Mediterranean. You will never escape me!”

      Icarus grabbed the wax gun and sprayed it at the king, who stepped back in surprise. The guards rushed forward, but each got a stream of hot wax in his face.

      “The vent!” Icarus yelled to his father.

      “Get them!” King Minos raged.

      Together, the old man and his son pried open the manhole cover, and a column of hot air blasted out of the ground. The king watched, incredulous, as the inventor and son shot into the sky on their bronze wings, carried by the updraft.

      “Shoot them!” the king yelled, but his guards had brought no bows. One threw his sword in desperation, but Daedalus and Icarus were already out of reach. They wheeled above the maze and the king’s palace, then zoomed across the city of Knossos and out past the rocky shores of Crete. Icarus laughed. “Free, Father! You did it.”

      The boy spread his wings to their full limit and soared away on the wind.

      “Wait!” Daedalus called. “Be careful!”

      But Icarus was already out over the open sea, heading north and delighting in their good luck. He soared up and scared an eagle out of its flight path, then plummeted toward the sea like he was born to fly, pulling out of a nosedive at the last second. His sandals skimmed the waves.

      “Stop that!” Daedalus called. But the wind carried his voice away. His son was drunk on his own freedom.

      The old man struggled to catch up, gliding clumsily after his son. They were miles from Crete, over deep sea, when Icarus looked back and saw his father’s worried expression.

      Icarus smiled. “Don’t worry, Father! You’re a genius! I trust your handiwork—”

      The first metal feather shook loose from his wings and fluttered away. Then another. Icarus wabbled in midair. Suddenly he was shedding bronze feathers, which twirled away from him like a flock of frightened birds.

      “Icarus!” his father cried. “Glide! Extend the wings. Stay as still as possible!”

      But Icarus flapped his arms, desperately trying to reassert control. The left wing went first—ripping away from the straps.

      “Father!” Icarus cried. And then he fell, the wings stripped away until he was just a boy in a climbing harness and a white tunic, his arms extended in a useless attempt to glide.

      I woke with a start, feeling like I was falling. The corridor was dark. In the constant moaning of the Labyrinth, I thought I could hear the anguished cry of Daedalus calling his son’s name, as Icarus, his only joy, plummeted toward the sea, three hundred feet below.

      * * *

      There was no morning in the maze, but once everyone woke up and had a fabulous breakfast of granola bars and juice boxes, we kept traveling. I didn’t mention my dream. Something about it had really freaked me out, and I didn’t think the others needed to know that.

      The old stone tunnels changed to dirt with cedar beams, like a gold mine or something. Annabeth started getting agitated.

      “This isn’t right,” she said. “It should still be stone.”

      We came to a cave where stalactites hung low from the ceiling. In the center of the dirt floor was a rectangular pit, like a grave. Grover shivered. “It smells like the Underworld in here.”

      Then I saw something glinting at the edge of the pit—a foil wrapper. I shined my flashlight into the hole and saw a half-chewed cheeseburger floating in brown carbonated muck.

      “Nico,” I said. “He was summoning the dead again.”

      Tyson whimpered. “Ghosts were here. I don’t like ghosts.”

      “We’ve got to find him.” I don’t know why, but standing at the edge of that pit gave me a sense of urgency. Nico was close, I could feel it. I couldn’t let him wander around down here, alone except for the dead. I started to run.

      “Percy!” Annabeth called.

      I ducked into a tunnel and saw light up ahead. By the time Annabeth, Tyson, and Grover caught up with me, I was staring at daylight streaming through a set of bars above my head. We were under a steel grate made out of metal pipes. I could see trees and blue sky.

      “Where are we?” I wondered.

      Then a shadow fell across the grate and a cow stared down at me. It looked like a normal cow except with was a weird color—bright red, like a cherry. I didn’t know cows came in that color.

      The cow mooed, put one hoof tentatively on the bars, then backed away.

      “It’s a cattle guard,” Grover said.

      “A what?” I asked.

      “They put them at the gates of ranches so cows can’t get out. They can’t walk on them.”

      “How do you know that?”

      Grover huffed indignantly. “Believe me, if you had hooves, you’d know about cattle guards. They’re annoying!”

      I turned to Annabeth. “Didn’t Hera say something about a ranch? We need to check it out. Nico might be there.”

      She hesitated. “All right. But how do we get out?”

      Tyson solved that problem by hitting the cattle guard with both hands. It popped off and went flying out of sight. We heard a CLANG! and a startled Moo! Tyson blushed.

      “Sorry, cow!” he called.

      Then he gave us a boost out of the tunnel.

      We were on a ranch, all right. Rolling hills stretched to the horizon, dotted with oak trees and cactuses and boulders. A barbed wire fence ran from the gate in either direction. Cherry-colored cows roamed around, grazing on clumps of grass.

      “Red cattle,” Annabeth said. “The cattle of the sun.”

      “What?” I asked.

      “They’re sacred to Apollo.”

      “Holy cows?”

      “Exactly. But what are they doing—”

      “Wait,” Grover said. “Listen.”

      At first everything seemed quiet…but then I heard it: the distant baying of dogs. The sound got louder. Then the underbrush rustled, and two dogs broke through. Except it wasn’t two dogs. It was one dog with two heads. It looked like a greyhound, long and snaky and sleek brown, but its neck V’d into two heads, both of them snapping and snarling and generally not very glad to see us.

      “Bad Janus dog!” Tyson cried.

      “Arf!” Grover told it, and raised a hand in greeting. The two-headed dog bared its teeth. I guess it wasn’t impressed that Grover could speak animal. Then its master lumbered out of the woods, and I realized the dog was the least of our problems.

      He was a huge guy with stark white hair, a straw cowboy hat, and a braided white beard— kind of like Father Time, if Father Time went redneck and got totally jacked. He was wearing jeans, a DON’T MESS WITH

      TEXAS T-shirt, and a denim jacket with the sleeves ripped off so you could see his muscles. On his right bicep was a crossed-swords tattoo. He held a wooden club about the size of a nuclear warhead, with six-inch spikes bristling at the business end.

      “Heel, Orthus,” he told the dog.

      The dog growled at us once more, just to make his feelings clear, just to make his feelings clear, then circled back to his master’s feet. The man looked us up and down, keeping his club ready.

      “What’ve we got here?” he asked. “Cattle rustlers?”

      “Just travelers,” Annabeth said. “We’re on a quest.”

      The man’s eye twitched. “Half-bloods, eh?”

      I started to say, “How did you know—”

      Annabeth put her hand on my arm. “I’m Annabeth, daughter of Athena. This is Percy, son of Poseidon. Grover the satyr. Tyson the—”

      “Cyclops,” the man finished. “Yes, I can see that.” He glowered at me.

      “And I know half-bloods because I am one, sonny. I’m Eurytion, the cowherd for this here ranch. Son of Ares. You came through the Labyrinth like the other one, I reckon.”

      “The other one?” I asked. “You mean Nico di Angelo?”

      “We get a load of visitors from the Labyrinth,” Eurytion said darkly. “Not many ever leave.”

      “Wow,” I said. “I feel welcome.”

      The cowherd glanced bend him like someone was watching. Then he lowered his voice. “I’m only going to say this once, demigods. Get back in the maze now. Before it’s too late.”

      “We’re not leaving,” Annabeth insisted. “Not until we see this other demigod. Please.”

      Eurytion grunted. “Then you leave me no choice, missy. I’ve got to take you to the boss.”

      * * *

      I didn’t’ feel like we were hostages or anything. Eurytion walked alongside us with his club across his shoulder. Orthus the two-headed dog growled a lot and sniffed at Grover’s legs and shot into the bushes once in a while to chase animals, but Eurytion kept him more or less under control. We walked down a dirt path that seemed to go on forever. It must’ve been close to a hundred degrees, which was a shock after San Francisco. Heat shimmered off the ground. Insects buzzed in the trees. Before we’d gone very far, i was sweating like crazy. Flies swarmed us. Every so often we’d see a pen full of red cows or even stranger animals. Once we passed a corral where the fence was coated in asbestos. Inside, a herd of fire-breathing horses milled around. The hay in their feeding trough was on fire. The ground smoked around their feet, but the horses seemed tame enough. One big stallion looked at me and whinnied, columns of red flame billowing out his nostrils. I wondered if it hurt his sinuses.

      “What are they for?” I asked.

      Eurytion scowled. “We raise animals for lots of clients. Apollo, Diomedes, and…others.”

      “Like who?”

      “No more questions.”

      Finally we came out of the woods. Perched on a hill above us was a big ranch house—all white stone and wood and big windows.

      “It looks like a Frank Lloyd Wright!” Annabeth said.

      I guess she was talking about some architectural thing. To me it just looked like the kind of place where a few demigods could get into serious trouble. We hiked up the hill.

      “Don’t break the rules,” Eurytion warned as we walked up the steps to the front porch. “No fighting. No drawing weapons. And don’t make any comments about the boss’s appearance.”

      “Why?” I asked. “What does he look like?”

      Before Eurytion could reply, a new voice said, “Welcome to the Triple G

      Ranch.”

      The man on the porch had a normal head, which was a relief. His face was weathered and brown from years in the sun. He had a slick black hair and a black pencil moustache like villains have in old movies. He smiled at us, but the smile wasn’t friendly; more amused, like Oh boy, more people to torture!

      I didn’t ponder that very long, though, because then I noticed his body…or bodies. He had three of them. Now you’d think I would’ve gotten used to weird anatomy after Janus and Briares, but this guy was three complete people. His neck connected to the middle chest like normal, but he had two more chests, one to either side, connected at the shoulders, with a few inches between. His left arm grew out of his left chest, and the same on the right, so he had two arms, but four armpits, if that makes any sense. The chests all connected into one enormous torso, with two regular but very beefy legs, and he wore the most oversized pair of Levis I’d ever seen. His chests each wore a different color Western shirt—green, yellow, red, like a stoplight. I wondered how he dressed the middle chest, since it had no arms. The cowherd Eurytion nudged me. “Say Hello to Mr. Geryon.”

      “Hi,” I said. “Nice chests—uh, ranch! Nice ranch you have.”

      Before the three-bodied man could respond, Nico di Angelo came out of the glass doors onto the porch. “Geryon, I won’t wait for—”

      He froze when he saw us. Then he drew his sword. The blade was just like I’d seen in my dream; short, sharp, and dark as midnight. Geryon snarled when he saw it. “Put that away, Mr. di Angelo. I ain’t gonna have my guests killin’ each other.”

      “But that’s—”

      “Percy Jackson,” Geryon supplied. “Annabeth Chase. And a couple of their monster friends. Yes, I know.”

      “Monster friends?” Grover said indignantly.

      “That man is wearing three shirts,” Tyson said, like he was just realizing this.

      “They let my sister die!” Nico’s voice trembled with rage. “They’re here to kill me!”

      “Nico, we’re not here to kill you.” I raised my hands. “What happened to Bianca was—”

      “Don’t speak her name! You’re not worthy to even talk about her!”

      “Wait a minute,” Annabeth pointed at Geryon. “How do you know our names?”

      The three-bodied man winked. “I make it my business to keep informed, darlin’. Everybody pops into the ranch from time to time. Everyone needs something from ole Geryon. Now, Mr. di Angelo, put that ugly sword away before I have Eurytion take it form you.”

      Eurytion sighed, but he hefted his spiked club. At his feet, Orthus growled. Nico hesitated. He looked thinner and paler than he had in the Irismessages. I wondered if he’d eaten in the last week. His black clothes were dusty from traveling in the Labyrinth, and his dark eyes were full of hate. He was too young to look so angry. I still remembered him as the cheerful little kid who played with Mythomagic cards.

      Reluctantly, he sheathed his sword. “If you come near me, Percy, I’ll summon help. You don’t want to meet my helpers, I promise.”

      “I believe you,” I said.

      Geryon patted Nico’s shoulder. “There, we’ve all made nice. Now come along, folks. I want to give you a tour of the ranch.”

      * * *

      Geryon had a trolley thing—like one of those kiddie trains that take you around zoos. It was painted black and white in a cowhide pattern. The driver’s car had a set of longhorns stuck to the hood, and the horn sounded like a cowbell. I figured maybe this was how he tortured people. He embarrassed them to death riding around in the moo-mobile. Nico sat in the very back, probably so he could keep an eye on us. Eurytion crawled in next to him with his spiked club and pulled his cowboy hat over his eyes like he was going to take a nap. Orthus jumped in the front seat next to Geryon and began barking happily in two-part harmony. Annabeth, Tyson, Grover, and I took the middle two cars.

      “We have a huge operation!” Geryon boasted as the moo-mobile lurched forward. “Horses and cattle mostly, but all sorts of exotic varieties, too.”

      We came over a hill, and Annabeth gasped. “Hippalektryons? I thought they were extinct!”

      At the bottom of the hill was a fenced-in pasture with a dozen of the weirdest animals I’d ever seen. Each had the front half of a horse and the back half of a rooster. Their rear feet were huge yellow claws. They had feathery tails and red wings. As I watched, two of them got in a fight over a pile of seed. They reared up on their wings at each other until the smaller one galloped away, its rear bird legs putting a little hop in its step.

      “Rooster ponies,” Tyson said in amazement. “Do they lay eggs?”

      “Once a year!” Geryon grinned in the rearview mirror. “Very much in demand for omelettes!”

      “That’s horrible!” Annabeth said. “They must be an endangered species!”

      Geryon waved his hand. “Gold is gold, darling. And you haven’t tasted the omelettes.”

      “That’s not right,” Grover murmured, but Geryon just kept narrating the tour.

      “Now, over here,” he said, “we have our fire-breathing horses, which you may have seen on your way in. They’re bred for war, naturally.”

      “What war?” I asked.

      Geryon grinned slyly. “Oh, whichever one comes along. And over yonder, of course, are our prize red cows.”

      Sure enough, hundreds of the cherry-colored cattle were grazing the side of the hill.

      “So many,” Grover said.

      “Yes, well, Apollo is too busy to see them,” Geryon explained, “so he subcontracts to us. We breed them vigorously because there’s such a demand.”

      “For what?” I asked.

      Geryon raised an eyebrow. “Meat, of course! Armies have to eat.”

      “You kill the sacred cows of the sun god for hamburger meat?” Grover said. “That’s the against ancient laws!”

      “Oh, don’t get so worked up, satyr. They’re just animals.”

      “Just animals!”

      “Yes, and if Apollo cared, I’m sure he would tell us.”

      “If he knew,” I muttered.

      Nico sat forward. “I don’t care about any of this, Geryon. We had business to discuss, and this wasn’t it!”

      “All in good time, Mr. di Angelo. Look over here; some of my exotic game.”

      The next field was ringed in barbed wire. The whole area was crawling with giant scorpions.

      “Triple G Ranch,” I said, suddenly remembering. “Your mark was on the crates at camp. Quintus got his scorpions from you.”

      “Quintus…” Geryon mused. “Short gray hair, muscular, swordsman?”

      “Yeah.”

      “Never heard of him,” Geryon said. “Now, over here are my prize stables!

      You must see them.”

      I didn’t need to see them, because as soon as we got within three hundred yards I started to smell them. Near the banks of a green river was a horse corral the size of a football field. Stables lined one side of it. About a hundred horses were milling around in the muck—and when I say muck, I mean horse poop. It was the most disgusting thing I’d ever seen, like a poop blizzard had come through and dumped four feet of the stuff overnight. The horses were really gross from wading through it, and the stables were just as bad. It reeked like you would not believe—worse than the garbage boats on the East River.

      Even Nico gagged. “What is that?”

      “My stables!” Geryon said. “Well, actually they belong to Aegas, but we watch over them for a small monthly fee. Aren’t they lovely?”

      “They’re disgusting!” Annabeth said.

      “Lots of poop,” Tyson observed.

      “How can you keep animals like that?” Grover cried.

      “Y’all getting’ on my nerves,” Geryon said. “These are flesh-eating horses, see? They like these conditions.”

      “Plus, you’re too cheap to have them cleaned,” Eurytion mumbled from under his hat.

      “Quiet!” Geryon snapped. “All right, perhaps the stables are a bit challenging to clean. Perhaps they do make me nauseous when the wind blows the wrong way. But so what? My clients still pay me well.”

      “What clients?” I demanded.

      “Oh, you’d be surprised how many people will pay for a flesh-eating horse. They make great garbage disposals. Wonderful way to terrify your enemies. Great at birthday parties! We rent them out all the time.”

      “You’re a monster,” Annabeth decided.

      Geryon stopped the moo-mobile and turned to look at her. “What gave it away? Was it the three bodies?”

      “You have to let these animals go,” Grover said. “It’s not right!”

      “And the clients you keep talking about,” Annabeth said. “You work for Kronos, don’t you? You’re supplying his army with horses, food, whatever they need.”

      Geryon shrugged, which was very weird since he had three sets of shoulders. It looked like he was doing the wave all by himself. “I work for anyone with gold, young lady. I’m a businessman. And I sell them anything I have to offer.”

      He climbed out of the moo-mobile and strolled toward the stables as if enjoying the fresh air. It would’ve been a nice view, with the river and the trees and hills and all, except for the quagmire of horse muck. Nico got out of the back car and stormed over to Geryon. The cowherd Eurytion wasn’t as sleepy as he looked. He hefted his club and walked after Nico.

      “I came here for business, Geryon,” Nico said. “And you haven’t answered me.”

      “Mmm.” Geryon examined a cactus. His left arm reached over and scratched his middle-chest. “Yes, you’ll get a deal, all right.”

      “My ghost told me you could help. He said you could guide us to the soul we need.”

      “Wait a second,” I said. “I thought I was the soul you wanted.”

      Nico looked at me like I was crazy. “You? Why would I want you?

      Bianca’s soul is worth a thousand of yours! Now, can you help me, Geryon, or not?”

      “Oh, I imagine I could,” the rancher said. “Your ghost friend, by the way, where is he?”

      Nico looked uneasy. “He can’t form in broad daylight. It’s hard for him. But he’s around somewhere.”

      Geryon smiled. “I’m sure. Minos likes to disappear when things get…difficult.”

      “Minos?” I remembered the man I’d seen in my dreams, with the golden crown, the pointed beard, and the cruel eyes. “You mean that evil king?

      That’s the ghost who’s been giving you advice?”

      “It’s none of your business, Percy!” Nico turned back to Geryon. “And what do you mean about things getting difficult?”

      The three-bodied man sighed. “Well, you see, Nico—can I call you Nico?”

      “No.”

      “You see, Nico, Luke Castellan is offering very good money for halfbloods. Especially powerful half-bloods. And I’m sure when he learns your little secret, who you really are, he’ll pay very, very well indeed.”

      Nico drew his sword, but Eurytion knocked it out of his hand. Before I could get up, Orthus pounced on my chest and growled, his faces an inch away from mine.

      “I would stay in the car, all of you,” Geryon warned. “Or Orthus will tear Mr. Jackson’s throat out. Now, Eurytion, if you would be so kind, secure Nico.”

      The cowherd spit into the grass. “Do I have to?”

      “Yes, you fool!”

      Eurytion looked bored, but he wrapped one huge arm around Nico and lifted him up like a wrestler.

      “Pick up the sword, too,” Geryon said with distaste. “There’s nothing I hate worse than Stygian Iron.”

      Eurytion picked up the sword, careful not to touch the blade.

      “Now,” Geryon said cheerfully, “we’ve had the tour. Let’s go back to the lodge, have some lunch, and send an Iris-message to our friends in the Titan army.”

      “You fiend!” Annabeth cried.

      Geryon smiled at her. “Don’t worry, my dear. Once I’ve delivered Mr. di Angelo, you and your party can go. I don’t interfere with quests. Besides, I’ve been paid well to give you safe passage, which does not, I’m afraid, include Mr. di Angelo.

      “Paid by whom?” Annabeth said. “What do you mean?”

      “Never you mind, darlin’. Let’s be off, shall we?”

      “Wait!” I said, and Orthus growled. I stayed perfectly still so he wouldn’t tear my throat out. “Geryon, you said you’re a businessman. Make me a deal.”

      Geryon narrowed his eyes. “What sort of deal? Do you have gold?”

      “I’ve got something better. Barter.”

      “But Mr. Jackson, you’ve got nothing.”

      “You could have him clean the stables,” Eurytion suggested innocently.

      “I’ll do it!” I said. “If I fail, you get all of us. Trade us all to Luke for gold.”

      “Assuming the horses don’t eat you,” Geryon observed.

      “Either way, you get my friends,” I said. “But if I succeed, you’ve got to let all of us go, including Nico.”

      “No!” Nico screamed. “Don’t do me any favors, Percy. I don’t want your help!”

      Geryon chuckled. “Percy Jackson, those stables haven’t been cleaned in a thousand years…though it’s true I might be able to sell more stable space if all that poop was cleared away.”

      “So what have you got to lose?”

      The rancher hesitated. “All right, I’ll accept your offer, but you have to get it done by sunset. If you fail, your friends get sold, and I get rich.”

      “Deal.”

      He nodded. “I’m going to take your friends with me, back to the lodge. We’ll wait for you there.”

      Eurytion gave me a funny look. It might have been sympathy. He whistled, and the dog jumped off me and onto Annabeth’s lap. She yelped. I knew Tyson and grover would never try anything as long as Annabeth was hostage. I got out of the car and locked eyes with her.

      “I hope you know what you’re doing,” she said quietly.

      “I hope so, too.”

      Geryon got behind the driver’s wheel. Eurytion hauled Nico into the backseat.

      “Sunset,” Geryon reminded me. “No later.”

      He laughed at me once more, sounded his cowbell horn, and the moomobile rumbled off down the trail.


    10. #10
      NINE
      I SCOOP POOP


      I lost hope when I saw the horses’ teeth.

      As I got closer to the fence, I held my shirt over my nose to block the smell. One stallion waded through the muck and whinnied angrily at me. He bared his teeth, which were pointed like a bear’s.

      I tried to talk to him in my mind. I can do that with most horses. Hi, I told him. I’m going to clean your stables. Won’t that be great?

      Yes! The horse said. Come inside! Eat you! Tasty half-blood!

      But I’m Poseidon’s son, I protested. He created horses. Usually this gets me VIP treatment in the equestrian world, but not this time.

      Yes! The horse agreed enthusiastically. Poseidon can come in, too! We will eat you both! Seafood!

      Seafood! The other horses chimed in as they waded through the field. Flies were buzzing everywhere, and the heat of the day didn’t make the smell any better. I’d had some idea that I could do this challenge, because I remembered how Hercules had done it. He’d channeled a river into the stables and cleaned them out that way. I figured I could maybe control the water. But if I couldn’t get close to the horses without getting eaten, that was a problem. And the river was downhill from the stables, a lot farther away than I’d realized, almost half a mile. The problem of the poop looked a lot bigger up close. I picked up a rusted shovel and experimentally scooped some away from the fence line. Great. Only four billion shovelfuls to go. The sun was already sinking. I had a few hours at best. I decided the river was my only hope. At least it would be easier to think at the riverside than it was here. I set off downhill.

      * * *

      When I got to the river, I found a girl waiting for me. She was wearing jeans and a green T-shirt and her long brown hair was braided with river grass. She had a stern look on her face. Her arms were crossed.

      “Oh no you don’t,” she said.

      I stared at her. “Are you a naiad?”

      She rolled her eyes. “Of course!”

      “But you speak English. And you’re out of the water.”

      “What, you don’t think we can act human if we want to?”

      I’d never thought about it. I kind of felt stupid, though, because I’d seen plenty of naiads at camp, and they’d never done much more than giggle and wave at me from the bottom of the canoe lake.

      “Look,” I said. “I just came to ask—”

      “I know who you are,” she said. “And I know what you want. And the answer is no! I’m not going to have my river used again to clean that filthy stable.”

      “But—”

      “Oh, save it, sea boy. You ocean-god types always think you’re soooo much more important than some little river, don’t you? well let me tell you, this naiad is not going to be pushed around just because your daddy is Poseidon. This is freshwater territory, mister. The last guy who asked me this favor—oh, he was way better-looking than you, by the way—he convinced me, and that was the worst mistake I’ve ever made! Do you have any idea what all that horse manure does to my ecosystem? Do I look like a sewage treatment plant to you? My fish will die. I’ll never get the much out of my plants. I’ll be sick for years. NO THANK YOU!”

      The way she talked reminded me of my mortal friend, Rachel Elizabeth Dare—kind of like she was punching me with words. I couldn’t blame the naiad. Now that I thought about it, I’d be pretty mad if somebody dumped four million pounds of manure in my home. But still…”

      “My friends are in danger,” I told her.

      “Well, that’s too bad! But it’s not my problem. And you’re not going to ruin my river.”

      She looked like she was ready for a fight. Her fists were balled, but I thought I heard a little quiver in her voice. Suddenly I realized that despite her angry attitude, she was afraid of me. She probably thought I was going to fight her for control of the river, and she was worried she would lose. The thought made me sad. I felt like a bully, a son of Poseidon throwing his weight around.

      I sat down on a tree stump. “Okay, you win.”

      The naiad looked surprised. “Really?”

      “I’m not going to fight you. It’s your river.”

      She relaxed her shoulders. “Oh. Oh, good. I mean—good thing for you!”

      “But my friends and I are going to get sold to the Titans if I don’t clean those stables by sunset. And I don’t know how.”

      The river gurgled along cheerfully. A snake slid through the water and ducked its head under. Finally the naiad sighed.

      “I’ll tell you a secret, son of the sea god. Scoop up some dirt.”

      “What?”

      “You heard me.”

      I crouched down and scooped up a handful of Texas dirt. It was dry and black and spotted with tiny clumps of white rock…No, something besides rock.

      “Those are shells,” the naiad said. “Petrified seashells. Millions of years ago, even before the time of the gods, when only Gaea and Ouranos reigned, this land was under the water. It was part of the sea.”

      Suddenly I saw what she meant. There were little pieces of ancient sea urchins in my hand, mollusk shells. Even the limestone rocks had impressions of seashells embedded in them.

      “Okay,” I said. “What good does that do me?”

      “You’re not so different from me, demigod. Even when I’m out of the water, the water is within me. It is my life source.” She stepped back, put her feet in the river, and smiled. “I hope you find a way to rescue your friends.”

      And with that she turned to liquid and melted into the river.

      * * *

      The sun was touching the hills when I got back to the stables. Somebody must’ve come by and fed the horses, because they were tearing into huge animal carcasses. I couldn’t tell what kind of animal, and I really didn’t want to know. If it was possible for the stables to get more disgusting, fifty horses tearing into raw meat did it.

      Seafood! one thought when he saw me. Come in! We’re still hungry!

      What was I supposed to do? I couldn’t use the river. And the fact that this place had been under water a million years ago didn’t exactly help me now. I looked at the little calcified seashell in my palm, then at the huge mountain of dung.

      Frustrated, I threw the shell into the poop. I was about to turn my back on the horses when I heard a sound.

      PFFFFFFT! Like a balloon with a leak.

      I looked down where I had thrown the shell. A tiny spout of water was shooting out of the muck.

      “No way,” I muttered.

      Hesitantly, I stepped toward the fence. “Get bigger,” I told the waterspout. SPOOOOOOOSH!

      Water shot three feet into the air and kept bubbling. It was impossible, but there it was. A couple of horses came over to check it out. One put his mouth to the spring and recoiled.

      Yuck! he said. Salty!

      It was seawater in the middle of a Texas ranch. I scooped up another handful of dirt and picked out the shell fossils. I didn’t really know what I was doing, but I ran around the length of the stable, throwing shells into the dung piles. Everywhere a shell hit, a saltwater spring erupted. Stop! The horses cried. Meat is good! Baths are bad!

      Then I noticed the water wasn’t running out of the stables or flowing downhill like water normally would. It simply bubbled around each spring and sank into the ground, taking the dung with it. The horse poop dissolved in the saltwater, leaving regular old wet dirt.

      “More!” I yelled.

      There was a tugging sensation in my gut, and the waterspouts exploded like the world’s largest carwash. Salt water shot twenty feet into the air. The horses went crazy, running back and forth as the geysers sprayed them from all directions. Mountains of poop began to melt like ice. The tugging sensation became more intense, painful even, but there was something exhilarating about seeing all that salt water. I had made this. I had brought the ocean to this hillside.

      Stop, lord! a horse cried. Stop, please!

      Water was sloshing everywhere now. The horses were drenched, and some were panicking and slipping in the mud. The poop was completely gone, tons of it just dissolved into the earth, and the water was now starting to pool, trickling out of the stable, making a hundred little streams down toward the river.

      “Stop,” I told the water.

      Nothing happened. The pain in my gut was building. If I didn’t shut off the geysers soon, the salt water would run into the river and poison the fish and plants.

      “Stop!” I concentrated all my might on shutting off the force of the sea. Suddenly the geysers shut down. I collapsed to my knees, exhausted. In front of me was a shiny clean horse stable, a field of wet salty mud, and fifty horses that had been scoured so thoroughly their coats gleamed. Even the meat scraps between their teeth had been washed out.

      We won’t eat you! the horses wailed. Please, lord! no more salty baths!

      “On one condition,” I said. “You only eat the food your handlers give you from now on. Not people. Or I’ll be back with more seashells!”

      The horses whinnied and made me a whole lot of promises that they would be good flesh-eating horses from now on, but I didn’t stick around to chat. The sun was going down. I turned and ran full speed toward the ranch house.

      * * *

      I smelled barbecue before I reached the house, and that made me madder than ever, because I really love barbecue.

      The deck was set up for a party. Streamers and balloons decorated the railing. Geryon was flipping burgers on a huge barbecue cooker made from an oil drum. Eurytion lounged at a picnic table, picking his fingernails with a knife. The two-headed dog sniffed the ribs and burgers that were frying on the grill. And then I saw my friends: Tyson, Grover, Annabeth, and Nico all tossed in a corner, tied up like rodeo animals, with their ankles and wrists roped together and their mouths gagged.

      “Let them go!” I yelled, still out of breath from running up the steps. “I cleaned the stables!”

      Geryon turned. He wore an apron on each chest, with one word on each, so together they spelled out: KISS—THE—CHEF. “Did you, now? How’d you manage it?”

      I was pretty impatient, but I told him.

      He nodded appreciatively. “Very ingenious. It would’ve been better if you’d poisoned that pesky naiad, but no matter.”

      “Let my friends go,” I said. “We had a deal.”

      “Ah, I’ve been thinking about that. The problem is, if I let them go, I don’t get paid.”

      “You promised!”

      Geryon made a tsk-tsk noise. “But did you make me swear on the River Styx? No you didn’t. So it’s not binding. When you’re conducting business, sonny, you should always get a binding oath.”

      I drew my sword. Orthus growled. One head leaned down next to Grover’s ear and bared its fangs.

      “Eurytion,” Geryon said, “the boy is starting to annoy me. Kill him.”

      Eurytion studied me. I didn’t like my odds against him and that huge club.

      “Kill him yourself,” Eurytion said.

      Geryon raised his eyebrows. “Excuse me?”

      “You heard me,” Eurytion grumbled. “You keep sending me out to do your dirty work. You pick fights for no good reason, and I’m getting tired of dying for you. You want to fight the kid, do it yourself.”

      It was the most un-Areslike thing I’d ever heard son of Ares say. Geryon threw down his spatula. “You dare defy me? I should fire you right now!”

      “And who’d take care of your cattle? Orthus, heel.”

      The dog immediately stopped growling at Grover and came to sit by the cowherd’s feet.

      “Fine!” Geryon snarled. “I’ll deal with you later, after the boy is dead!”

      He picked up two carving knives and threw them at me. I deflected one with my sword. The other impaled itself in the picnic table an inch from Eurytion’s hand.

      I went on the attack. Geryon parried my first strike with a pair of red-hot tongs and lunged at my face with a barbecue fork. I got inside his next thrust and stabbed him right through the middle chest.

      “Aghhh!” He crumpled to his knees. I waited for him to disintegrate, the way monsters usually do. But instead he just grimaced and started to stand up. The wound in his chef’s apron started to heal.

      “Nice try, sonny,” he said. “Thing is, I have three hearts. The perfect backup system.”

      He tipped over the barbecue, and coals spilled everywhere. One landed next to Annabeth’s face, and she let out a muffled scream. Tyson strained against his bonds, but even his strength wasn’t enough to break them. I had to end this fight before my friends got hurt.

      I jabbed Geryon in the left chest, but he only laughed. I stuck him in the right stomach. No good. I might as well have been sticking a sword in a teddy bear for all the reaction he showed.

      Three hearts. The perfect backup system. Stabbing one at a time was no good….

      I ran into the house.

      “Coward!” he cried. “Come back and die right!”

      The living room walls were decorated with a bunch of gruesome hunting trophies—stuffed deer and dragon heads, a gun case, a sword display, and a bow with a quiver.

      Geryon threw his barbecue fork, and it thudded into the wall right next to my head. He drew two swords from the wall display. “Your head’s gonna go right there, Jackson! Next to the grizzly bear!”

      I had a crazy idea. I dropped Riptide and grabbed the bow off the wall. I was the worst archery shot in the world. I couldn’t hit the targets at camp, much less a bull’s eye. But I had no choice. I couldn’t win this fight with a sword. I prayed to Artemis and Apollo, the twin archers, hoping they might take pity on me for once. Please, guys. Just one shot. Please. I notched an arrow.

      Geryon laughed. “You fool! One arrow is no better than one sword.”

      He raised his swords and charged. I dove sideways. Before he could turn, I shot my arrow into the side of his right chest. I heard THUMP, THUMP, THUMP, as the arrow passed clean through each of his chests and flew out his left side, embedding itself in the forehead of the grizzly bear trophy. Geryon dropped his swords. He turned and stared at me. “You can’t shoot. They told me you couldn’t…”

      His face turned a sickly shade of green. He collapsed to his knees and began crumbling into sand, until all that was left were three cooking aprons and an oversized pair of cowboy boots.

      * * *

      I got my friends untied. Eurytion didn’t try to stop me. Then I stoked up the barbecue and threw the food into the flames as a burnt offering for Artemis and Apollo.

      “Thanks, guys,” I said. “I owe you one.”

      The sky thundered in the distance, so I figured maybe the burgers smelled okay.

      “Yay for Percy!” Tyson said.

      “Can we tie up this cowherd now?” Nico asked.

      “Yeah!” Grover agreed. “And that dog almost killed me!”

      I looked at Eurytion, who still was sitting relaxed at the picnic table. Orthus had both his heads on the cowherd’s knees.

      “How long will it take Geryon to re-form?” I asked him.

      Eurytion shrugged. “Hundred years? He’s not one of those fast re-formers, thank the gods. You’ve done me a favor.”

      “You said you’d died for him before,” I remembered. “How?”

      “I’ve worked for that creep for thousands of years. Started as a regular half-blood, but I chose immortality when my dad offered it. Worst mistake I ever made. Now I’m stuck here at this ranch. I can’t leave. I can’t quit. I just tend the cows and fight Geryon’s fights. We’re kinda tied together.”

      “Maybe you can change things,” I said.

      Eurytion narrowed his eyes. “How?”

      “Be nice to the animals. Take care of them. Stop selling them for food. And stop dealing with the Titans.”

      Eurytion thought about that. “That’d be all right.”

      “Get the animals on your side, and they’ll help you. Once Geryon gets back, maybe he’ll be working for you this time.”

      Eurytion grinned. “Now, that I could live with.”

      “You won’t try to stop us leaving?”

      “Shoot, no.”

      Annabeth rubbed her bruised wrists. She was still looking at Eurytion suspiciously. “Your boss said somebody paid for our safe passage. Who?”

      The cowherd shrugged. “Maybe he was just saying that to fool you.”

      “What about the Titans?” I asked. “Did you Iris-message them about Nico yet?”

      “Nope. Geryon was waiting until after the barbecue. They don’t know about him.”

      Nico as glaring at me. I wasn’t sure what to do about him. I doubted he would agree to come with us. On the other hand, I couldn’t just let him roam around on his own.

      “You could stay here until we’re done with our quest,” I told him. “It would be safe.”

      “Safe?” Nico said. “What do you care if I’m safe? You got my sister killed!”

      “Nico,” Annabeth said, “that wasn’t Percy’s fault. And Geryon wasn’t lying about Kronos wanting to capture you. If he knew who you were, he’d do anything to get you on his side.”

      “I’m not on anyone’s side. And I’m not afraid.”

      “You should be,” Annabeth said. “Your sister wouldn’t want—”

      “If you cared for my sister, you’d help me bring her back!”

      “A soul for a soul?” I said.

      “Yes!”

      “But if you didn’t want my soul—”

      “I’m not explaining anything to you!” He blinked tears out of his eyes.

      “And I will bring her back.”

      “Bianca wouldn’t want to be brought back,” I said. “Not like that.”

      “You didn’t know her!” he shouted. “How do you know what she’d want?”

      I stared at the flames in the barbecue pit. I thought about the line in Annabeth’s prophecy: You shall rise or fall by the ghost king’s hand. That had to be Minos, and I had to convince Nico not to listen to him. “Let’s ask Bianca.”

      The sky seemed to grow darker all of a sudden.

      “I’ve tried,” Nico said miserably. “She won’t answer.”

      “Try again. I’ve got a feeling she’ll answer with me here.”

      “Why would she?”

      “Because she’s been sending me Iris-messages,” I said, suddenly sure of it.

      “She’s been trying to warn me what you’re up to, so I can protect you.”

      Nico shook his head. “That’s impossible.”

      “One way to find out. You said you’re not afraid.” I turned to Eurytion.

      “We’re going to need a pit, like a grave. And food and drinks.”

      “Percy,” Annabeth warned. “I don’t think this is a good—”

      “All right,” Nico said. “I’ll try.”

      Eurytion scratched his beard. “There’s a hole dug out back for a septic tank. We could use that. Cyclops boy, fetch my ice chest from the kitchen. I hope the dead like root beer.”


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